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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/sawpub/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Are schedules really worth it?<\/p>\n
You\u2019re a week into the homeschooling year. The shiny gloss is starting to wear off your lovely new schedule. The kids are losing motivation. Getting up at five o\u2019clock is starting to feel like a bad idea.<\/p>\n
And the question begins to tug at your mind: Did I really make the right choice about having a schedule? Is this whole scheduling thing really worth the trouble? Is the effort ever going to pay off? Are schedules really for everyone, after all?<\/p>\n
I feel like this question highlights my opinion about scheduling. It all comes down to how you define the noun. In the purest sense, we are all on a diet. A diet is simply another term for the food we eat. Does this mean that we should all be on a hyper-restrictive, count-your-calories, weigh-yourself-every-morning kind of diet?<\/p>\n
Of course not!<\/p>\n
There is a time and place for intensive dieting. No one will doubt the fact that such diets require a huge amount of mental energy and self-discipline, but despite the cost, there are individuals who respond very well to intensive diets, and those are the individuals who tend to rave about them. Others don\u2019t feel like the benefits are worth the commitment. (At least not right here, right now.) Those people are still on a diet\u2014they\u2019re still eating food of some type or description\u2014they\u2019re just not on a dieting diet. And they probably don\u2019t identify as dieters.<\/p>\n
I have a close family member who embraces the belief that the most successful eating changes are made by seeing food patterns as a \u201clifestyle\u201d rather than a \u201cdiet.\u201d I have another close family member who prefers \u201croutines\u201d to \u201cschedules,\u201d because she feels less over-structured with the former word.<\/p>\n
Technically speaking, we\u2019re all on a schedule. We all repeat certain activities in certain patterns as we go about our daily life. We may have developed a very precise system to dictate these patterns, or we may leave them more to chance. We may adhere faultlessly to a detailed schedule, or we may be flexibly guided by a more general one.<\/p>\n
Some people find security and stability in scheduling every moment of their \u201cstandard\u201d day. Others are driven distracted if they feel that their schedule has deprived their life of all spontaneity.<\/p>\n
Regardless of where you weigh in on this scale, you can derive significant benefits from scheduling in one form or another. The benefits of an intentional schedule include:<\/p>\n
It\u2019s astonishing how much time we waste, wondering what to do next. As the saying is, you will fill the space you have\u2014even when it\u2019s a bigger space than you need.<\/p>\n
A well-designed schedule lets you accomplish more by eliminating wasted time, and preventing necessary activities from expanding into all-day marathons.<\/p>\n
Another benefit of a planned schedule, is that you have to choose<\/em> what you do. Without creating a written schedule, it\u2019s easy to be driven by the emergency of the moment. You get to the end of the day and find out you have accomplished nothing beyond \u201csurvival.\u201d<\/p>\n Schedules let you be intentional about the activities that fill your time\u2014they let you focus on the tasks that matter, rather than the tasks that scream the loudest.<\/p>\n Life without order is . . . well . . . chaotic! This is particularly noticeable when children are involved in the schedule, but it\u2019s true of adults as well. Knowing what to do, and when to do it, keeps us from scurrying around frantically, in the aimless endeavour to \u201cget things done\u201d without a map.<\/p>\n Even if you constantly deviate from your schedule, the act of planning out your day gives you a baseline to keep life from swinging out of control.<\/p>\n Accomplishing more.<\/p>\n Accomplishing the things that matter.<\/p>\n Finding life less chaotic and more orderly.<\/p>\n All of these things contribute to greater energy, both mentally and physically. It\u2019s amazing how much fuel we burn, just deciding what comes next. Not to mention the added stress of not knowing whether all the bases are covered\u2014and the panic of realizing, too late, that you missed something that needed<\/em> to get done.<\/p>\n We all need a certain amount of structure in our lives, and structure is exactly what schedules provide.<\/p>\n Yes, they are. Even halfway through the back-to-school letdown, when all the adrenaline is gone, and you\u2019re just left with that annoying old chart stuck up on the fridge, telling you what to do next\u2014I really believe that a schedule is worth the effort.<\/p>\n Don\u2019t get me wrong. A successful schedule is going to look different for every person. But once you\u2019ve figured out what a successful schedule looks like for you, you\u2019ll start reaping the bountiful rewards of accomplishing more, in a more structured way, and with less waste of mental and physical energy.<\/p>\n It looks like this post ran away with me! I was hoping to take a look at a few of the potential pitfalls of scheduling, as well as some tips for avoiding them\u2014but it seems that will have to wait till next week. For now, I hope you\u2019ve found the motivation you need to start tapping into the benefits of schedules.<\/p>\n Are you struggling to build organized habits in other areas besides scheduling? Take a look at our Timeless Tip:<\/p>\nc) Less Chaos<\/em><\/strong><\/h6>\n
d) Greater Energy<\/em><\/strong><\/h6>\n
So Are Schedules Really Worth It?<\/strong><\/h5>\n