“The trouble is that you think you have time.”— Jack Kornfield

Daily writing prompt
Something on your “to-do list” that never gets done.

Oh Dear Gentle Readers, where shall I start! And yes, I just watched the first four episodes of S4 of Bridgerton. (Have you watched it? What did you think?) One of the distractions that I allow in my life 🙂

Let’s see…there are three items on my to-do list that I allow myself to be pulled away from:

Video: Canva

1. My Garden

I long to have a beautiful little well planned garden that has splashes of colour throughout the year. This takes time and research which I just have not made the time to do. I have a garden but it is a very green garden with very few colourful flowers. I am very inspired by two of my neighbours’ gardens. I am determined that this is the year that I get that planning and planting done!

2. Writing That Book

I know, this one is on a lot of people’s lists. I started this blog to gain confidence in my writing, which I have, but I still can’t get passed the first page or two of a book. I have no idea when that will happen.

3. Starting my business

This one is probably the most urgent of the three but still I have not lifted a finger. I have even listed it last. ´The reality is that it takes time and effort, which I still have not committed to internally. I guess I will get there when I get there. I need to work at becoming a morning person because I am way too tired in the evening to much done.

Of course as Jack Kornfield says, I think I have time but time is moving on anyway. What’s it gonna take to get yourself moving Michelle??? With any luck, I will have a great story to share by the end of the year.

Thanks for popping by.

Bye for now!

Mastering My Time: Overcoming FOMO and Distractions

I have always suffered from FOMO. It drives me insane. The invention of social media and the smartphone did not help my FOMO at all. It probably made it worse. I ended up spending up to 7 hours a day on my phone every day, and worse still, I had nothing to show for this addiction.

The bad news is time flies. The good news is you’re the pilot.

– Michael Altshuler

Goodbye Notifications

I was determined to take back control of my time, so I switched off my social media app notifications. I thought I would crumble without knowing what everyone else was posting. I used to check my phone anyway initially. Eventually, the lack of notifications meant a lack of distraction, and I would find myself getting caught up in whatever I was doing. I would still see the icon when I picked up my phone to respond to a message or a call, so I would still check the apps throughout the day, although less often.

Enter the App Library

Then Apple created the “App Library”. It was a game changer. Suddenly, all my apps were in my phone’s app library, and most couldn’t be seen. The apps I used most often were still most prominent, though, so my most often used social media apps were still visible when I accessed the library for something else, which prompted me to open them. Then Apple made it possible to hide them. I could set it so they were never prominent in the app library. What a pleasure! Now they were truly out of sight and therefore out of mind!

Apple App Library
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Discovering Focus Mode

What the App Library did was stop me from accessing my social media apps as often as I used to, but it didn’t stop me from constantly picking up my phone because of other notifications. I was still spending about 6 hours a day on my phone. Very alarming. I wasn’t sure how to change the habit until I accidentally activated Sleep Mode. I had set the amount of time I wanted to sleep every night and the time for my alarm, not realising that this automatically activated Sleep mode. Sleep mode sends a notification 45 minutes before my set bedtime to let me know it is wind-down time. This is when sleep mode automatically activates. I started noticing in the mornings that I have notifications that I had missed during the wind-down and sleep times I had set. After investigating, I discovered what I had done and was pleasantly surprised. I had completely forgotten about my phone until the next morning because I didn’t receive any notifications at all!

Photo by Yaroslav Shuraev on Pexels.com

I now have a work focus setting that activates as soon as I drive into our office parking lot. I also have a personal focus setting that activates when I get home, and of course, my sleep focus setting. My screen time has reduced to around 4 hours a day, which is way better than 7 hours a day. Each focus mode is set to allow calls and messages from family and close friends. I also allow “Intelligent Breakthrough” in some modes which allows priority messaging through.

Another benefit is that I no longer suffer from FOMO. I find that I only access my social media apps once or twice a day, often for work and not for personal use. I do still doom scroll about once a week just to chill, but I only really do it on Instagram. It’s my favourite social media app.

Just when I thought I was ready to be the master of focusing, we went back to the office full-time. 🤦🏽‍♀️ Now I just need to figure out how to shut people out while working in an open plan office…sigh. Please share any tricks or tips you might have.

That’s it from me today.  Thanks for popping by.   How do you control time spent on your cellphone. ?  Let me know in the comments

Quotes To Live By: Stephen Covey

“The key is not to prioritize what’s on your schedule, but to schedule your priorities.”

Stephen Covey
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