Title: 
Is Time Your Enemy?  Conquer Time with an “Unschedule!”

Word Count:
730

Summary:
Time can be your friend or your enemy.  For many people who have “free time” to accomplish long-term projects or writing tasks, it is a merciless tyrant.  It is just too easy to allow the slightly harder task to slide, as you fill in your day with the humdrum and the emergencies.


Keywords:
time management, academic, procrastination, Thesis, dissertation, writing help, writing, creative thinking, teaching, organization, creative


Article Body:
Time can be your friend or your enemy.  For many people who have “free time” to accomplish long-term projects or writing tasks, it is a merciless tyrant.  It is just too easy to allow the slightly harder task to slide, as you fill in your day with the humdrum and the emergencies.

The Enemy You Don’t Know CAN Hurt You

In Procrastination:  Why You Do It; What to Do About It by Jane Burka and Lenor Yuen, the authors suggest that procrastinators (which I’m convinced means most of us) have a strange relationship with time.  They engage in “wishful thinking:” they believe that they can magically pull and stretch time to meet their needs. They act as if time is not finite and limited.  

So if time perpetually controls you, it may be because you don’t understand it.  You think that small tasks will be endless (so you put off doing them,) or you think big tasks will just take an hour or two (so you don’t leave enough time for them.)

As a matter of fact, research has shown that most people overestimate how much time they have actually spent on their most important long-term projects.  

Another reason time controls you, according to Burka and Yuen, is that you have no idea how much time you’re already spending on tasks such as commuting, shopping, cooking or emailing.  Therefore it’s a mystery how much free time is available for the difficult yet easy-to-put-off tasks that seem so overwhelming.

Or maybe you’ve voluntarily overscheduled yourself due to your “endlessly-expanding” view of time.  Little by little you’ve used up your free time.


The Unschedule

How can you tame time?

Enter the “Unschedule.”  The Unschedule is a time management tool developed by Neil Fiore, the author of The Now Habit.  

To create your own unschedule, either download from the link in my signature file below, or use a weekly calendar that divides each day into hours.  

Here are the rules to make the Unschedule work for you:
·	Use a pencil to allow for later changes 
·	Write down everything you must do in the coming week, NOT including your long-term project.
o	Include everything, including meals, sleep, commuting, appointments, and classes
o	Estimate when and how long each will take and mark it in your Unschedule on the hours you most likely will do each activity
o	Include recreation, leisure and social activities (crucial!)
·	Look at your Unschedule at this point to become aware of 
o	How much unscheduled time is actually available
o	What’s missing from your life – do you have enough time for fun, socializing, and just decompressing?  
·	As the week progresses, each time that you work on your Project for at least 30 minutes, mark it in your Unschedule (Fiore insists on 30, but I say 15 is enough.)  Remember, you don’t mark it in ahead of time.  It works best if you can highlight those time blocks in color.  You can then total the amount of time spent working towards your goal at the end of each day and week.

Why Fill In the Time Blocks AFTER You Work on Your Project?

This accomplishes several things:
·	You avoid being disappointed in yourself (as you may have in the past because you scheduled so much Project time and then let yourself down by not accomplishing the work.)
·	If you have a rebellious streak, you will not having anything to rebel against, since you haven’t filled in the times you MUST work ahead of time
·	You will feel good about what you HAVE done as opposed to bad about what you haven’t done
·	You will be reminded to reward yourself by switching to a more enjoyable activity
·	You will more easily be able to track how much you have actually worked on your project each week, as opposed to how much time you wished you would work on your project.
·	You will prove to yourself that small blocks of time DO add up, and are worth doing.
·	You can look for patterns – e.g., discover your best work times or days.


If working with a schedule hasn’t worked for you, if you recognize that you have a distorted relationship with time, or if you’re just a garden-variety procrastinator like most of us, then the Unschedule may be for you.  Try it!




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