Tag: work life balance

  • Another Life Reset

    Nearly every day for the last year this blog has given me space to think about and write about living a more simple, purposeful life.

    Better food.

    Longer walks.

    Moments of captured creativity.

    But so what’s my point?

    Who or what are you
    leaving behind in 2021?

    I guess getting to the end of a year of being someone who works in digital technology but plays in the very analog world of cast iron, fire, wilderness, and trails has found me at a bit of a crossroads.

    I turned forty-five this past month.

    I’ve been working at a post-university career-type job for a little over twenty-some years.

    I suppose (and if I’m lucky) I could expect to work for a little over twenty-some years until I’m supposed to retire and pack up my suitcase to see the world as an old guy.

    But all this thinking and writing and pondering a different sort of life has left me with a particular notion of switching things up.

    I seriously looked into finding a bakery apprenticeship (or something similar) over the summer. It didn’t work out, but it did put me in the mindset of what exactly might be encompassed in a career change, even one massively dramatic as moving from a keyboard to a cutting board.

    So while I’m lucky in another way in that we didn’t lose anyone close to us this year (despite a global pandemic raging everywhere we look) I did lose a piece of me, a particular certainty of myself and who I am, and not necessarily in a bad way.

    What am I leaving behind in 2021? I’m stepping away from the resolute and stubborn guy who knows exactly where he’s going to be sitting in twenty some years. I don’t think I do anymore. I think he faded away sometime over the summer and in his place is someone who wants … needs … a simpler bite of meaning in his life.

    Whether that’s a result of all this writing, or just an obvious correlation, I’m not sure yet.

  • Short: Friday Fires

    Long work days, short cool evenings.

    I had my phone in one hand and an axe in the other (metaphorically speaking, of course) as Friday’s quitting time slipped into view. The benefit of (still) working from home is that I can check the laptop for rogue, last-minute emails even while I heat up the backyard firepit for a cookout.

    At five pm I cracked a beer and stoked the coals just right to grill up some juicy steaks and a foil packet of freshly dug garden spuds.

    Not a terrible way to start the weekend. Not terrible at all.

  • Work-Life-Balance

    I’ve had a busy week.

    While this blog tends to be a great outlet for me to find some balance between my time at my desk and my time in real world, sometimes that balance tips too far to one side and I find myself sitting on a Friday evening with not much to write about because I haven’t done much worth writing about over the past week.

    Today is kinda like that.

    Balancing Screen Time

    With dozens of readers coming to this blog every day you may be wondering why I still need to work.

    But seriously.

    I have a great job with lots of flexibility for time off and to live a life where I can sleep in my own bed every night. I’m grateful for that.

    That said … said job is ninety-five percent spent in front of a screen.

    So you blog in your free time? You ask. On a screen?

    I enjoy having a place where I can be myself and do something similar that I do for others, but do that thing for myself. But yes, not every day do I find myself savoring the idea of another few minutes in front of another screen.

    How does one balance?

    Balance comes from a having a plan, or so I find. Balance is the result of having something to do that pulls you away from the easy thing to do … too easy, like flipping open your phone and scrolling, or flicking the remote and queuing up the next streaming show.

    Balance comes from doing the things that you need to do in proportion to the things you want to do. Not everyone has that luxury, of course, but it is something that we all seek and for many a thing that we will spend much of our lives working for, looking for, striving for.

    I’m here on a Friday afternoon after completing a very long list of things I needed to do.

    Meetings. Reports. Emails. Managing.

    I’m hoping my weekend holds an equitable list of things I want to do.

    Wandering. Cooking. Running. Creating.

    That’s my work-life balance.