Thursday Sucked and Friday Didn’t
June 16, 2011 at 8:32 am 4 comments
How can two days back to back feel so different?
MY THURSDAY
8:30 am – 2-hour meeting with two colleagues in a different department and a consultant I had hired.
10:30 am – Stop in for tail end of quarterly staff chapel and chat with staff I don’t see very often
11:30 am– Rush off to a 2-hour awards luncheon where I did not know anyone
Afternoon – back-to-back meetings with no time to even check email
4:30 pm – crash
MY FRIDAY
7:15 am — 3.5-hour breakfast and presentations for a leadership program I’m in where I have gotten to know some of the people who were at the event (and I got to get on stage for 5 minutes to talk)
11:30 am – lunch with someone trying to figure out what to do with his life
Afternoon – working back and forth with my staff on projects
5:30 pm – catch up on emails
7 pm – leave work with energy to go to dinner with a friend
How is it that I worked a longer day Friday and left feeling good? If you looked at my calendar on Outlook, the schedules would not appear that different. When we think about working in our strengths, it’s the nuances that really matter.
On both Thursday and Friday, I went to a long breakfast/lunch. The difference was that I knew people at one and that I got to be up on stage, which I love!
On Thursday, I was in meetings all day. As an introvert, that killed me. (For a colleague of mine, this would have been her dream day!) On Friday, I was around people all day, but it was people close to me like my staff (I didn’t have to “be on”).
How can you shift your schedule just slightly to make sure you are not ready to crash at the end of the day? Look closely at how you book your calendar, and book some slots for things that make you feel strong and energized every day. Don’t book the draining activities back to back in one day. It’s pretty simple, but easy to overlook if you are not paying attention.
Entry filed under: Designed by God, Life lessons, Practical tools. Tags: needs, perspective, reinvent, sweet spot, tools.

1.
Kim Elliott | June 16, 2011 at 10:23 am
Thanks Michele, for that great practical implementation trick to capitalize on our strengths. And don’t forget to make time to blog….an activity which uses your strengths and dare I say is a callling? Not to mention all the people you bless with your wisdom.
2.
Michele Corbett | June 16, 2011 at 10:36 am
Thanks Kim!!! I do hope to blog more now that my commitments are freeing up. YAY!
3.
denadyer70 | November 9, 2011 at 10:40 am
Great thoughts. Thanks for sharing them.
4.
Jessica P. | November 27, 2011 at 6:10 pm
Really great perspective. Good example of knowing yourself and taking the time to reflect on how well your life/job/task is fitting together with that self.