Anonymous wrote:This will never be me. Errands before a 2 pm seminar? Heck no!
I need to arrive at the seminar by 1:30 or else I feel late and it gives me anxiety. So arriving by 1:30 means I need to leave by 12:45. Leaving at 12:45 means I need to eat lunch at 12. Eating lunch at 12 means I need to either make sure I eat breakfast before 7:30 or skip it altogether. Making sure I'm up early enough to eat breakfast by 7:30 stresses me out the night before so I don't sleep well. I wake up cranky and tired. The eggs taste too eggy and the toast won't get crisp enough. During the hours of 8 am to 11:30 am I sulk about having to even go to the seminar until I realize if I don't get my butt in gear, I'm going to show up looking a hot mess.
See? Could never be me.
Anonymous wrote:How do you do it and make it to scheduled events on time?
Example: At a seminar and one of the people at my table had gone to the dry cleaners, grocery shopped, went to the dentist, grabbed donuts and coffee and was able to make a 2pm session.
I don’t know that with any amount of scheduling my day could run so concisely. Even if I start at 6am, I find that I am either cutting into running late or unable to accomplish a list of errands in full before going to something scheduled like that. Traffic also will slow down my day.
Are there just fast people and slow people in the world with time management? Is it the locations and distances? I think I just must move too slowly to get things done. I’ve encountered this before also where people come to a kids party after going to 5,6 places beforehand and can manage without being late.
Anonymous wrote:I have a good sense of time, hate being late so usually have a buffer. I get a lot done but I am NOT good at filling those times where I am waiting on something rather than something waiting on me. I need to get better at that. Answer some texts, pay some bills, etc. Any ideas?
Anonymous wrote:As I was reading I thought you were going to say the person did all that before a 9 am session. 2 pm? Yeah, most people could do all of that, plus run 3 miles and do a few loads of laundry.
What time do you wake up that you couldn't get all that done by 2 pm?
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thank you all and to respond to a few questions about my background. I work in Operations Management hence the Seminar and hilariously the fact that I cannot seem to “operate” my life into a swift enough order to accomplish multiple tasks🤣 I also work outside of the city but commute in and out including for things like medical appointments and dry cleaning which probably delays me on those days. Think Dentist in McLean, Office in Bethesda, home in AU Park. Add to that the fact that I have the issue of going to my old stomping grounds for things like cleaners and medical professionals which can be out of the way.
Anonymous wrote:How do you do it and make it to scheduled events on time?
Example: At a seminar and one of the people at my table had gone to the dry cleaners, grocery shopped, went to the dentist, grabbed donuts and coffee and was able to make a 2pm session.
I don’t know that with any amount of scheduling my day could run so concisely. Even if I start at 6am, I find that I am either cutting into running late or unable to accomplish a list of errands in full before going to something scheduled like that. Traffic also will slow down my day.
Are there just fast people and slow people in the world with time management? Is it the locations and distances? I think I just must move too slowly to get things done. I’ve encountered this before also where people come to a kids party after going to 5,6 places beforehand and can manage without being late.
Anonymous wrote:This will never be me. Errands before a 2 pm seminar? Heck no!
I need to arrive at the seminar by 1:30 or else I feel late and it gives me anxiety. So arriving by 1:30 means I need to leave by 12:45. Leaving at 12:45 means I need to eat lunch at 12. Eating lunch at 12 means I need to either make sure I eat breakfast before 7:30 or skip it altogether. Making sure I'm up early enough to eat breakfast by 7:30 stresses me out the night before so I don't sleep well. I wake up cranky and tired. The eggs taste too eggy and the toast won't get crisp enough. During the hours of 8 am to 11:30 am I sulk about having to even go to the seminar until I realize if I don't get my butt in gear, I'm going to show up looking a hot mess.
See? Could never be me.
Anonymous wrote:How do you do it and make it to scheduled events on time?
Example: At a seminar and one of the people at my table had gone to the dry cleaners, grocery shopped, went to the dentist, grabbed donuts and coffee and was able to make a 2pm session.
I don’t know that with any amount of scheduling my day could run so concisely. Even if I start at 6am, I find that I am either cutting into running late or unable to accomplish a list of errands in full before going to something scheduled like that. Traffic also will slow down my day.
Are there just fast people and slow people in the world with time management? Is it the locations and distances? I think I just must move too slowly to get things done. I’ve encountered this before also where people come to a kids party after going to 5,6 places beforehand and can manage without being late.
Anonymous wrote:As I was reading I thought you were going to say the person did all that before a 9 am session. 2 pm? Yeah, most people could do all of that, plus run 3 miles and do a few loads of laundry.
What time do you wake up that you couldn't get all that done by 2 pm?