Laura Vanderkam: How to gain control of your free time
Laura Vanderkam shatters the myth that there just isn’t enough time in the week for working professionals to live happy, balanced and productive lives. Full bio
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I write about time management,
for my occasional tardiness,
on time management.
together and savor that irony.
is that I have lots of tips and tricks
that are doing a story along these lines,
find an extra hour in the day.
bits of time off everyday activities,
of this piece, but I'm always interested
up with before they call me.
have to make right-hand turns --
in microwave usage:
minutes on the package,
the bottom side of that.
which makes sense on some level,
fast-forward through the commercials.
eight minutes every half hour,
of watching TV,
32 minutes to exercise?
of time here and there, add it up,
to everything we want to do.
people spend their time
schedules hour by hour,
has it completely backward.
we want by saving time.
of extremely busy women.
sometimes their own businesses,
maybe parents to care for,
of their time for a week
they worked and slept,
about their strategies, for my book.
for something.
that her water heater has broken,
all over her basement.
like this happen to you,
frightening, sopping mess.
aftermath that night,
crew dealing with the ruined carpet.
on her time log.
an extra hour in the day.
at the start of the week,
to train for a triathlon?"
to mentor seven worthy people?"
what most of us would've said,
how busy I am?"
all over her basement,
is that time is highly elastic.
what we choose to put into it.
of that broken water heater.
of the busiest people I ever interviewed.
a small business
to set up an interview
to speak with me.
unavailable to speak with me
even more intrigued,
she explains it like this.
because it's not a priority."
"It's not a priority."
that's really more accurate language.
to dust my blinds,
to dust my blinds,
a matter of lacking time;
that time is a choice.
for making different choices,
of that broken water heater?
to figure out what they are.
for thinking about this.
coming up to the end of the year
annual performance reviews.
your successes over the year,
to do this looking forward.
it's the end of next year.
a performance review,
amazing year for you professionally.
that made it so amazing?
year's performance review now.
for your personal life, too.
like me, come December,
sheets of colored paper,
as the family holiday letter.
of literature, really,
everyone in the household is,
your friends and family
that mattered to you over the year.
it's the end of next year,
that made it so amazing?
year's family holiday letter now.
review and the family holiday letter,
we can work on in the next year.
these down into doable steps.
to write a family history.
some other family histories,
you want to ask your relatives,
figure out a training plan,
out of the back of the closet.
of that broken water heater,
before we are in them.
is Friday afternoons.
an economist might call
on Friday afternoons saying,
and professional priorities
about what those should be.
of time Friday afternoon,
list: career, relationships, self.
in all three categories.
of the next week,
complicated for some people than others.
are just harder than others.
to find time to take that poetry class
children on your own.
anyone's struggle.
I am about to tell you are empowering.
job, so 40 hours a week,
so 56 hours a week --
for other things.
for other things.
people's estimated work weeks
75-plus-hour work weeks
for what matters to you.
more time with your kids,
for a test you're taking,
and volunteer for two,
way more than full-time hours.
time to do amazing things.
bits of time, what do we do?
around the house
something wonderful on the bus
that required two bus rides
on weekends to get stuff to read.
almost, almost, enjoyable.
for meditating or praying.
because of your crazy work schedule,
could be a good substitute.
the whole of one's time
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Laura Vanderkam - AuthorLaura Vanderkam shatters the myth that there just isn’t enough time in the week for working professionals to live happy, balanced and productive lives.
Why you should listen
Between careers and kids, many women feel that they are too busy to cram in anything else. To test the truth of this feeling, author Laura Vanderkam began logging her time for each of the 168 hours of the week. Among her surprising findings: we retroactively overestimate the amount of time spent stressing about work while underestimating our available downtime.
In her latest book, I Know How She Does It, Vanderkam analyzes the ways in which professional women successfully balance free time and work -- and explores how everyday readers can benefit from their experiences.
Laura Vanderkam | Speaker | TED.com