18 Feb 2008 04:53:04 | Susan Dunn, MA, cEQc, The EQ Coach™
Remember the "Type A Personality"? First labeled because a
cardiologist found all the front ends of the seats in his
waiting room were worn. The “Type As,” so prone to heart
attacks, couldn’t sit back and relax for even a second.
Over the years, in working with Type A personalities (and
lately, those with "Achiever" on the StrengthsFinder(tm)
profile) who want to get more balance in their lives, I’ve
learned the ways of the Super Efficient who lack balance,
sacrifice pleasure and esthetics for efficiency, and know how to
churn it out.
Say what you will, their trains run on time!
If you need more time, try these things. If this becomes a
lifestyle, get some coaching.
1. Fix your hair once and for all.
Cut it all off or let it grow long so you can slap it up, or
wear it any length and accept it in the wash and dry mode.
Eliminate makeup.
2. Buy efficient containers.
Type As will tell you how much time is “wasted” in getting into
things. It takes less time to flip a cap on the shower wash than
to unscrew it; less time to pull-tab the coffee can than to use
a can opener; less time to zip and Velcro than to button; less
time to open a new CD with a CD-opener than whatever other d***
thing you try. Leave the top off the lotion tube. It won't dry
out.
3. Eliminate needless decisions.
Fix your work wardrobe so it will work with one pair of shoes
and one set of earrings. Have the same thing for breakfast every
day. Make Saturday morning grocery shopping day. Wash the car
every Sunday afternoon. No exceptions.
4. Focus on purpose and speed in daily maintenance regime and
just get them done.
Awaiting an important phone call last week, which of course came
when I stepped into the shower, I was out and clean – including
hair – in time to catch it on the 4th ring. Why are you spending
20 minutes in there? Same soap, same scrub, I just didn’t enjoy
it. P.S. Get good bath and shower mats so the rubber can hit the
road at top speed. Then you can really go fast. And buy thick
towels; it takes less time to dry yourself with a good towel. 5.
Streamline your Search and Seizure Mission.
Spend this week cataloguing the things you’re always hunting for
- and note how much time it takes. Then make a place for them
and keep them there. i.e., get all the medicines in one place,
get all the laundry supplies together, ALWAYS put your keys on
the kitchen counter.
One Achiever I work with keeps all his clothes on shelves in the
bedroom - no drawers to open, and he can see everything.
6. Use money to save time.
Having 2 school uniforms for your child means you must always be
worried there isn’t a clean one, and you’ll be forced to wash at
inconvenient times, sometimes just the uniform. What a waste! Go
ahead and buy 5 uniforms. Heck, buy 7.
Another application: If you cook and bake, go ahead and buy tiny
containers of every spice and herb known to [wo]man so you won't
have to go out and buy them one at a time when you need them. Or
have to change recipes after you've already spent time deciding
on the first one.
7. Quit wasting time on your food.
Another Type A-er doesn’t peel his carrots or remove the
greenery and that and a can of easy-open tuna is his lunch.
Every day. Another one brings two bananas - easy peel, not much
chewing - and a box of raisins he eats in two fistfuls. Then
it's back to work, hi ho!
Work up 3 meals you know your family will eat that are quick and
always have those ingredients on hand. In my house it was (1)
homemade chili, (2) macaroni ‘n’ cheese with meat and (3)
homemade stew. Ingredients required: frozen hamburger, stew
beef, and pork chops; can, bag or frozen macaroni and cheese –
frozen, of course, being the quicket; cans of tomatoes, beans
and consommé, potatoes and carrots. Mindless. And while they
“stew" you can build Rome!
8. Multitask
I wrote this Top Ten sitting in Jiffy Lube. Others were picking
navel fuzz, complaining to friends on their cell phones about
the long wait, making new friends, and reading mindless
magazines. Other things to do at Jiffy Lube: make shopping and
to-do lists, mark files for your secretary, write write your
mother, analyze the Schleiffen Plan. Don't just sit there!
9. Eliminate some pleasure and wandering in your daily life.
Biggest time wasters for me, because I love them so, are messing
with e-mail and chasing rabbit trails on the Internet. Turn off
the “You’ve got mail” sound and check your email just once a
day. Resist all urges to open links and go exploring the
wonderful and wacky world of the Internet. Label it “play” and
assign it a time.
10. Get a maid
I don’t care what Flylady says, if I do it myself it never ends
– it’s psychological. If I have the maid service it is all done
at once, and it isn’t my responsibility. Even flour spilled on
the kitchen floor can wait for a week if need be. Doing it all
at once saves getting stuff out, mixing things, moving around.
The freed energy alone - knowing it's their job, not mine -
makes me 10x as efficient.
About Author :
© Susan Dunn, MA, cEQc, The EQ Coach™, http://www.susandunn.cc .
Bringing the power of EQ to your life through coaching, distance
learning, eBooks, and Special Reports. Susan is the author of
“How to Live Your Life with Emotional Intelligence” –
http;//www.webstrategies.cc/ebooklibrary.html . Want to become a
certified EQ coach? Go here: http://www.eqcoach.net . Be
certified in 3 months, no residence requirement.