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Balancing Working At Home and Children
© Leslie Truex
Hi Leslie,
I have finally fulfilled my dream of working at home but I'm
finding it very hard to get my work done and still have time
for my family. I thought working at home would make it easy
for me to be flexible but I'm finding myself telling my kids
"not now" a lot. Any suggestions? Debbie, MI
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Hi Debbie,
When we begin to dream about working at home, the work part
is often the last thing we think about. Instead we imagine
sleeping in late, wearing our pajamas all day, watching
Barney with the kids then going to the park, keeping the
laundry folded and so on. But the reality is having enough
time to work and play is difficult to balance. Working at
home doesn't really add time to your schedule; it simply
makes it more flexible. Many parents think this flexibility
means being able to parent first and work second; or working
and giving family time simultaneously. But its difficult to
work and parent at the same time. And you can't expect to
earn a good income during children's nap times and then
spending the rest of the day being a mom.
One of things that makes working at home hard is that
boundaries between work and home are not clear unless you
make them so. At a regular job, you leave home to work. When
you come home, its all family time. Working at home often
means doing both often at the same time. I've combed my
daughter's hair while on the phone with a client. I have
made dinner while listening in on a training call. The
problem with having these "jobs" overlap is that it can get
confusing and overwhelming.
My strategies include setting strict work and non-work time
and then doing my darnedest to keep to the schedule. My day
may go something like this: 6:30 up and get the kids to
school; 7:30 - 8:00 exercise; 8- 8:30 housework (I use the
Fly Lady Method - Sink Reflections by Marla Cilly), 8:30 to
9:00 breakfast, shower etc; 9:00 am to 12:00 work, lunch; 1:
3:00 work, 3:00 - 3:30 nap (me), 3:30 to 7 kids home and
family time. If I need to work more, I may work from 7- 10
pm with a break around 8:30 pm to put the kids to bed.
During the summer this changes as my children are home. With
kids home, I work in hour shifts with short breaks with the
kids in between. I also try to finish early in the day so we
can go swimming or to the park. It's usually their reward
for letting me work in peace. During this time, I may work
before they get up and at night more to make for the lost
time.
It also helps to keep your tasks organized. I use the
desktop organizer for Windows and Palm called Agendus
(http://www.iambic.com/). It allows me to have my daily
to-dos and schedule appear on my weekly schedule as opposed
to just the daily schedule. This helps me stay focused on
projects or other things that take time to complete, make my
appointments, get those pesky little things done like a
quick call to question a bill, schedule my weekly and
monthly items as well as other things I need to keep
organized. You don't need a computer system to be organized.
Paper can work too. The point is to develop a system that
will help you keep track of all the work and non-work
related things you need to get done.
Finally, you will likely need to give up the idea that
working at home will the picture perfect situation you
imagined. You will need to prioritize your time. I would
like to spend all my time with the kids, but I need the
money. So I try to balance out the two. If something needs
to be dropped, it's usually the housework. In the end, the
better organized you are about your time, the more time you
will have for both work and family.
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Ask WAHS Leslie is Leslie Truex a stay and work-at-home mom
who has been helping people work at home since 1998 with her
web site Work-At-Home Success (http://www.workathomesuccess.com)
She is also the author of Jobs At Home: A Complete Guide to Finding
a Work-At-Home Job. Ask WAHS Leslie is a weekly column. You
can submit a question to Ask WAHS Leslie by emailing here.
success@workathomesuccess.com
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