Sentences with phrase «productive day spent»

Not exact matches

The same is true for a productive day, and how you spend your morning can dictate what the rest of your day will be like.
«I discovered that spending some extra moments in bed, centering myself toward the day, wasn't so much a habit as an essential way of being, and it made me much more productive as a thinker and writer,» she relates.
How you spend your first few minutes at work every morning can largely determine how productive and effective you'll be the rest of the day.
Spending a proportion of the working day cooped inside a car and possibly stuck in traffic is not conducive to a productive and efficient day's work!
Start spending at least one hour a day working this way, and you'll likely start to notice that hour becoming more and more productive.
It makes sense that you want to spend as much of your day as possible being productive, and as little as possible being unproductive.
Religion is a waste of time and I don't like to spend even a few minutes of my day thinking about it when I could be doing something far more productive... twiddling my thumbs, perhaps.
If you WOULD, then let's all spend a good portion of our day today fighting about the Loch Ness Monster — it might be just as productive.
While it's great to spend all day in the mountains, sometimes I've got to find that balance between being in the great outdoors and actually being productive.
I felt a little guilty not being as productive as I wanted to be, but it was glorious spending another day in pure vacation mode.
Knowing that there's a healthy breakfast waiting for me every day, without having to actually spend any time in the morning preparing it get's my day off to a good, more productive start.
Even on that day I spent half of my hike resting with the dogs instead of being productive.
By reframing my workouts as productive because they reset my mental stamina, I don't feel guilty about not spending all day in front of my computer.
How much of each day do you spend just trying to get yourself to a point where you can be productive or just function like a normal human being?
Even on that day I spent half of my hike resting with the dogs instead of being productive.
I have spent a very productive day reading through your posts here.
It's generally where we spend the majority of our waking hours, and we never seem to get everything finished by five o'clock, but the truth is that there are probably periods of time within each working day where we're not being as productive as we could be.
loving myself, smiling more often, dance like nobody is watching, accept genuine compliments from others, more travelling, eating better and healthier, being more present in the moment, more offline time, spending more quality time with the people whom I love the most, facing my fears and doing more of what makes my spirit excited no matter how crazy or scary something might sound or look like, taking onto new adventures, schedule my days better in order to have more time to be productive as well as more time for resting.
I'm usually pretty good at keeping to a productive schedule — working during the day and spending my nights cooking, exercising, and blogging.
I woke up earlier than usual, enjoyed spending the majority of my days outside, and felt was extremely productive when I opened up all of the windows and blasted my favorite Spotify playlist yesterday.
Got an early start to my morning, spent the day in meetings (but very productive for sure).
After spending the first day, exploring the neighborhood by our Air B&B, we decided to be more productive on our second day.
I literally spent five days basking in the sun, being extremely productive, meeting with bloggers, setting up meetings and collaborations and enjoying some BBQing with friends.
I find that when I am finally able to pull myself out of bed and spend some time eating breakfast, getting ready, AND maybe even doing something productive — I feel so great throughout the entire day!
We went to the party store to shop around for invitations for her upcoming Neon Birthday Party and then I spent a huge part of the day organizing and being productive.
«My talents and the opportunities I had to spend my days in really fun and productive and exciting ways, it just didn't point to being a poet.»
I'm (sadly) nowhere near as organized and so my estimates are based on little more than cumulative time taken rather than hours actually spent (and let's face it some days are way more productive than others!).
This surprising news left her feeling uncertain of what her future would hold, and in search of a productive way to spend her days.
I happened to take the last two days off work and instead of doing something productive as planned have actually spent 14 hours of that time playing this game.
After I spent something like $ 25 on it in one day, I thought, «This is not a road to anything productive or sane in my life.»
We spend significant hours of each day in chairs or couches of various kinds, and this can be productive and enjoyable as well as a potential risk to our health.
We both worked at home and found that we were both more productive when we spent part of the day working out of the house.
I can spend my day at a coffee shop, in my back yard, or at my office, and be equally productive in each place.
Did lawyers not have enough clients to stay busier through the day or are they not productive enough, are they not able to focus on essentially billable tasks and they're spending too much time on overhead related tasks and administrative tasks and we think there's a real opportunity for Clio to help them with both of those things.
Full disclosure: I've never been a full - time lawyer with a full caseload, but I do work for a living, and know the difference between a day spent procrastinating messing around on the Internet and a day spent being productive.
In the past, you've seen huge teams of twenty to sixty lawyers deployed just for reviewing M&A documents and spending maybe 60 %, maybe 90 %, on their work day going over these documents which could be spent on doing much more productive work.
She spends her days helping lawyers find ways to be efficient and more productive, with a heavy focus on simple tech tools.
Perhaps more importantly (for me personally), the RSS vs. email issue merely illustrates the bigger issue — how can lawyers spend productive days in the office given the ever increasing demands on their time and attention?
The one day or week you've spent in writing resume can be utilized in some other productive task.
Fifth, make sure you are not spending your days with nothing to do; any productive activity, from building your own website to exploring your career to traveling, will make sure that you stay active and don't fall victim to negative thoughts.
If we spend 8 hours a day at our job, 2 hours a day commuting (hopefully listening to podcasts that will enrich yourself instead of music or talk radio), there are still a good 4 - 5 hours a day we can spend doing things productive, like property hunting, rehabbing, managing your business, playing with your kids, and interacting with your spouse.
That's what happens when you spend all day on a minor project and tell yourself that you're being productive... never mind the major biannual report you're «conveniently» neglecting because it's so overwhelming!
While there's nothing better than spending a seriously productive session in the kitchen whipping up something truly fabulous that you're proud as punch to serve up at the dinner table, cooking for yourself and your family day - in day - out can feel like you're on a bit of a treadmill.
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