Moorea, French Polynesia |
Happy year of the snake! Today is Chinese New Year, and it's supposed to symbolize your year ahead. So, I intentionally spent all day with my husband and baby girl today, and it was wonderful. I hope my year ahead is filled with more family days like this.
Also, in my current mission of creating more of a work-life balance, I really appreciated this article that my writing buddy sent me from the New York Times. I hope you find it useful, too.
Relax! You'll Be More Productive
By Tony Schwartz
THINK
for a moment about your typical workday. Do you wake up tired? Check your
e-mail before you get out of bed? Skip breakfast or grab something on the run
that’s not particularly nutritious? Rarely get away from your desk for lunch?
Run from meeting to meeting with no time in between? Find it nearly impossible
to keep up with the volume of e-mail you receive? Leave work later than you’d
like, and still feel compelled to check e-mail in the evenings?
More and
more of us find ourselves unable to juggle overwhelming demands and maintain a
seemingly unsustainable pace. Paradoxically, the best way to get more done may
be to spend more time doing less. A new and growing body of multidisciplinary
research shows that strategic renewal — including daytime workouts, short
afternoon naps, longer sleep hours, more time away from the office and longer,
more frequent vacations — boosts productivity, job performance and, of course,
health.
“More,
bigger, faster.” This, the ethos of the market economies since the Industrial
Revolution, is grounded in a mythical and misguided assumption — that our
resources are infinite.
Time is the
resource on which we’ve relied to get more accomplished. When there’s more to
do, we invest more hours. But time is finite, and many of us feel we’re running
out, that we’re investing as many hours as we can while trying to retain some
semblance of a life outside work.
Although
many of us can’t increase the working hours in the day, we can measurably
increase our energy. Science supplies a useful way to understand the forces at
play here. Physicists understand energy as the capacity to do work. Like time,
energy is finite; but unlike time, it is renewable. Taking more time off is
counterintuitive for most of us. The idea is also at odds with the prevailing
work ethic in most companies, where downtime is typically viewed as time
wasted. More than one-third of employees, for example, eat lunch at their desks on a regular
basis. More than 50 percent assume they’ll work during their vacations.
In most
workplaces, rewards still accrue to those who push the hardest and most
continuously over time. But that doesn’t mean they’re the most productive.
Spending
more hours at work often leads to less time for sleep and insufficient sleep
takes a substantial toll on performance. In a study of nearly 400 employees,
published last year, researchers found that sleeping too little — defined as
less than six hours each night — was one of the best predictors of on-the-job
burn-out. A recent Harvard study estimated that sleep deprivation costs
American companies $63.2 billion a year in lost productivity.
The Stanford
researcher Cheri D. Mah found that when she got male basketball players to
sleep 10 hours a night, their performances in practice dramatically improved: free-throw and
three-point shooting each increased by an average of 9 percent.
Daytime naps
have a similar effect on performance. When night shift air traffic controllers
were given 40 minutes to nap — and slept an average of 19 minutes — they
performed much better on tests that measured vigilance and reaction time.
Longer naps
have an even more profound impact than shorter ones. Sara
C. Mednick, a sleep researcher at the University of California,
Riverside, found that a 60- to 90-minute nap improved memory test results as fully
as did eight hours of sleep.
MORE
vacations are similarly beneficial. In 2006, the accounting firm Ernst &
Young did an internal study of its employees and found that for each additional
10 hours of vacation employees took, their year-end performance ratings from
supervisors (on a scale of one to five) improved by 8 percent. Frequent
vacationers were also significantly less likely to leave the firm.
As athletes
understand especially well, the greater the performance demand, the greater the
need for renewal. When we’re under pressure, however, most of us experience the
opposite impulse: to push harder rather than rest. This may explain why a
recent survey by Harris Interactive found that Americans left an average
of 9.2 vacation days unused in 2012 — up
from 6.2 days in 2011.
The
importance of restoration is rooted in our physiology. Human beings aren’t
designed to expend energy continuously. Rather, we’re meant to pulse between
spending and recovering energy.
In the
1950s, the researchers William Dement and Nathaniel Kleitman discovered that we
sleep in cycles of roughly 90 minutes, moving from light to deep sleep and back
out again. They named this pattern the Basic-Rest Activity Cycle or BRAC. A
decade later, Professor Kleitman discovered that this cycle recapitulates
itself during our waking lives.
The
difference is that during the day we move from a state of alertness
progressively into physiological fatigue approximately every 90 minutes. Our
bodies regularly tell us to take a break, but we often override these signals
and instead stoke ourselves up with caffeine, sugar and our own emergency
reserves — the stress hormones adrenaline, noradrenaline and cortisol.
Working in
90-minute intervals turns out to be a prescription for maximizing productivity.
Professor K. Anders Ericsson and his colleagues
at Florida State University have studied elite performers, including musicians,
athletes, actors and chess players. In each of these fields, Dr. Ericsson found
that the best performers typically practice in uninterrupted sessions that last
no more than 90 minutes. They begin in the morning, take a break between
sessions, and rarely work for more than four and a half hours in any given day.
“To maximize
gains from long-term practice,” Dr. Ericsson concluded, “individuals must avoid
exhaustion and must limit practice to an amount from which they can completely
recover on a daily or weekly basis.”
I’ve
systematically built these principles into the way I write. For my first three
books, I sat at my desk for up 10 hours a day. Each of the books took me at
least a year to write. For my two most recent books, I wrote in three
uninterrupted 90-minute sessions — beginning first thing in the morning, when
my energy was highest — and took a break after each one.
Along the
way, I learned that it’s not how long, but how well, you renew that matters
most in terms of performance. Even renewal requires practice. The more rapidly
and deeply I learned to quiet my mind and relax my body, the more restored I
felt afterward. For one of the breaks, I ran. This generated mental and
emotional renewal, but also turned out to be a time in which some of my best
ideas came to me, unbidden. Writing just four and half hours a day, I completed
both books in less than six months and spent my afternoons on less demanding
work.
The power of
renewal was so compelling to me that I’ve created a business around it that
helps a range of companies including Google, Coca-Cola, Green Mountain Coffee,
the Los Angeles Police Department, Cleveland Clinic and Genentech.
Our own
offices are a laboratory for the principles we teach. Renewal is central to how
we work. We dedicated space to a “renewal” room in which employees can nap,
meditate or relax. We have a spacious lounge where employees hang out together
and snack on healthy foods we provide. We encourage workers to take renewal
breaks throughout the day, and to leave the office for lunch, which we often do
together. We allow people to work from home several days a week, in part so
they can avoid debilitating rush-hour commutes. Our workdays end at 6 p.m. and
we don’t expect anyone to answer e-mail in the evenings or on the weekends.
Employees receive four weeks of vacation from their first year.
Our basic
idea is that the energy employees bring to their jobs is far more important in
terms of the value of their work than is the number of hours they work. By
managing energy more skillfully, it’s possible to get more done, in less time,
more sustainably. In a decade, no one has ever chosen to leave the company. Our
secret is simple — and generally applicable. When we’re renewing, we’re truly
renewing, so when we’re working, we can really work.
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