Achieving work life balanceΒ takes self-awareness, making tough choices, and being disciplined. Β As a recovering over-achiever and perfectionist, this is hard for me. Β Β My natural tendency with any job is to err on the side of working over-time and prioritizing my job above anything else. Β The only reason I was able to maintain a healthy work life balance for the last six years was by contracting instead of working as a full time employee. Β Being paid by the hour reminded me constantly to stay un-attached and avoid over-working.
Now things are changing. Β I accepted a new full time job as Vice President of Customer Experience Programs for a $4.5B business. Β It’s everything I wanted in a job, including the fact that this company and my boss are known for supporting the work life balanceΒ of all their employees.
What’s the problem, you may ask? Β I was concerned that my natural tendency of wanting to please the boss or over-achieve beyond what was asked would take over as soon as I started. Β Old habits die hard. Half of the battle in achieving work life balanceΒ is fought within ourselves as we make decisions about how much to work and stress. Β So, to keep myself disciplined, I decided to do two things before I started working.
- I wrote a letter to myself. Β Β Before I got brain-washed by the corporate ladder again, I wanted to remind myself what success in this new full time role really means to me.
- I shared that letter with two people in my lifeΒ to keep me honest, and so they could support me in living a passionate, balanced, full life.
Now I want to share this letter with you, in case it can help you with your journey toward achieving work life balance.
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I am writing to remind myself of why I took this full time job, what I define as success, how to achieve success, and what I should watch out for.
Why I took this job –Β Take on a challenging, meaningful job while achieving work life balance.
- Make enough money to support my lifestyle and my passion for helping others.
- Make a difference for the customer experience.
- Work with cool peopleΒ who also have lives outside of work.
- Have time for my family, my blog, and my personal life.
- Prove to myself and others that meaningful work does not have to take over my life.
- Work Life Balance:
- Work regular hours – 35 to 40 hours is my goal. Β No weekends unless it’s an absolute emergency.
- Don’t take work or work stress home – everything can wait; remember how I did it with the contract. No one will die if I wait to work the next day.
- Have flexibility to work from home or take some hours off for kids — as long as I get my stuff done. Β Low face time. Β I need to build trust with my boss, so she can let me work whenever and wherever I want.
- Build enough autonomy to the point where I can work on some blog stuff at work. Β π
- Define my own travel schedule. At most, I’d like to take 1 trip every 2 months. Also, see if I can fit friends or visit-home-trips as part of it.
- A role that can make a real change in the world (inΒ this case, customer experience).
- Build relationships while working with people; remember, the ends do not justify the means.
- Remember, a 4 rating is enough, and my usual work is easily a 4. I don’tΒ need to get a 5.
- Don’t march at the same beat as type A people.
- Work Hour Boundaries
- Arrive around 8:30 -9, leave by 5 every day. Β Having to pick up Isabel will help with this.
- Turn off work phone after 6pm and turn it on at 8am. Β People will have to call me at my personal phone during those hours if they really need me.
- Don’t check email on the weekends unless I am more stressed not checking it. Β π
- Don’t accept 7am meetings or 4:30 or later meetings. Β 8am is okay as an exception.
- Set up regular lunches with people to block out my calendar. Β Block out at least 30 min for lunch on days with no lunch scheduled with others.
- Work Wed afternoon from home after 2pm.
- Remember, 80% is good enough. Perfectionism will suck up time, but won’t really change anything. Β When in doubt, work on the story and the hook rather than a perfect PowerPoint.
- Set subtle boundaries with my partners, boss, and team. Β Don’t reply to email after hours or on weekends unless requested.
- When I am putting too much stress on myself, read this, talk to my supporter, and write blog posts to stay self-aware.
- Take my vacations every year – at least 2 weeks away and 1 week around the house. Β Block out schedule for vacations in advance.
- Give myself cushion when setting timelines. Β Schedule meetings further out. Β Don’t crunch myself just because I can do it. Β Follow the culture of the company which respects work life balance of every employee. Β Don’t push too hard to deliver early. Β Go at the company’s normal speed.
- My need to please the boss or senior folks. Β I know I am good at what I do, so I don’t need to over-do things. Β Do it to build trust initially, and not so much to be praised.
- Perfectionist tendencies due to insecurity. Β Set a cut off time. Β Most people’s PowerPoints sucks; focus on the story, the hook, and the ask.
- My desire to work because the boss is working late or emailing me late. Β My previous client used to work late, but never expected me to. Β I do not need to feel guilty about this.
- My desire to compete with co-workers who are younger, but at the same level. Β Remember, I am choosing this better lifestyle for family and passion reasons. Β I win if I can do this job well at the hours I want. π
I know I can do it. Β This is the new game in my life — to make work fit into my life on my terms. Β In the end, I will be happy, less stressed, have a steady income, and make a difference. Β π
Your Comments: How are you achieving Β work life balance?Β I look forward to your comments below.
Like this post?Β Share on Linkedin, Email, Twitter, Facebook, Google +, etc.
Best wishes to a fulfilling life and career.
Lei
Neat post. Although, I do some of the things already, there are few things that I can take from this…especially all the bullets in “What I need to watch out for”.
And, now since you shared your letter with all of us, you have to abide by your “What I define as success”.
Hi rekha, I wrote this letter to myself three years ago. It’s great to get your comment to remind me to re-read this again. It’s good to realize how I define success still remain and I live by it. I now lead a major innovation effort. I am also getting better at setting boundaries and doing work on my terms. Much has to do also with having an amazing boss and the confidence to know that I can walk away from it if the work no longer fits my life. Glad this letter also helped you. π
This is a really cool post; it’s very authentic, and I love that. I think I’m going to write something like this for myself as well. π
Glad you like it Ryan. It was definitely therapeutic and also is keeping me honest with myself. Best wishes
Lei
Beautiful post!