One Week On, One Week Off sounds like a promising idea. The idea is that once you know you’ll be able to take the next week off, it’s easier to work this whole week full-time and with near-total dedication, and you’ll actually end up getting more done than with a traditional schedule.
It’s also interesting for noting that you should take your off-week as seriously as your on-week. You’re not supposed to just slack off and do nothing, but instead dedicate yourself to personal growth. Meet friends, go travel, tend your garden, attend to personal projects.
I saw somebody mention an alternating schedule of working one day and then taking one day off, but I think stretching the periods to be a week long can help you better immerse yourself in them.
After reading Kaj’s pointer, I spent several hours at Steve Pavlina’s site. It’s fascinating for someone like me who’s always in danger of falling apart at the self-discipline front if he’s not very vigilant about it. As a lot of self-help authors, Pavlina is very analytic; plus he’s open about his experiments in life style—which he tackles with the same resolve as his other projects—and Erin Pavlina is a “psychic reader” who apparently does consultations via telephone (preferably land line)!
One Week On, One Week Off sounds like a promising idea. The idea is that once you know you’ll be able to take the next week off, it’s easier to work this whole week full-time and with near-total dedication, and you’ll actually end up getting more done than with a traditional schedule.
It’s also interesting for noting that you should take your off-week as seriously as your on-week. You’re not supposed to just slack off and do nothing, but instead dedicate yourself to personal growth. Meet friends, go travel, tend your garden, attend to personal projects.
I saw somebody mention an alternating schedule of working one day and then taking one day off, but I think stretching the periods to be a week long can help you better immerse yourself in them.
After reading Kaj’s pointer, I spent several hours at Steve Pavlina’s site. It’s fascinating for someone like me who’s always in danger of falling apart at the self-discipline front if he’s not very vigilant about it. As a lot of self-help authors, Pavlina is very analytic; plus he’s open about his experiments in life style—which he tackles with the same resolve as his other projects—and Erin Pavlina is a “psychic reader” who apparently does consultations via telephone (preferably land line)!