Friday, November 15, 2019
3 ways to make planning a vacation a little easier for you
3 ways to make planning a vacation a little easier for you 3 ways to make planning a vacation a little easier for you You can follow a pre-vacation checklist one line at a time - including setting up the perfect out-of-office email reply - and still feel frazzled when youâre planning a trip.Here are three ways to take the edge off during the process.Stay ready: do some packing before you actually have toThis could both save time and help you avoid forgetting something on your way out.The Washington Post features information from and about Alice Boyes, PhD, the author of The Anxiety Toolkit and a former psychologist. Hereâs some insight on how she stays ready for travel.âRather than repacking toiletries every time, Boyes keeps duplicates of items she uses frequently, such as her toothbrush and toothpaste. She places one in a suitcase and keeps one at home. She also keeps clothing in her suitcase that she knows she will wear on the road. This allows her to put less time and energy into preparing the night before when sheâs usually still working late,â the publication reports.Before leaving : tell your colleagues when you will and wonât be freeElizabeth Grace Saunders, an author, founder of Real Life E Time Coaching Speaking and time management coach, explains this in the Harvard Business Review.âOnce youâve figured out what you will do before leaving on vacation and what can be handled while youâre away, clarify what you will not do until you return. I recommend having a sense of this in your mind early. But wait until three or four days before you leave to make the final call on whatâs in or out. By then you should be sure about what you can reasonably accomplish, and you can relay this information to your boss, teammates, and anyone else involved in the work,â she writes.âIt can be uncomfortable to have these conversations, but itâs almost always best to be up front about what to expect instead of leaving people hanging who are expecting something from you, and then having to deal with a mid-vacation crisis caused by lack of communication. Update co lleagues on the status of projects and let them know that nothing will move forward until after you get back in the office. Also, give key individuals the heads-up that you wonât be available - or as available - during the time that youâre away,â Saunders continues.On the trip: donât get flustered too easilyDonât forget to cut yourself some slack.Social psychologist Susan Newman told the Readerâs Digest that when things go off-track on your trip, you should âthink of it as an adventure, because often the mishaps and the things that go wrong actually become either humorous in your memory bank or the best thing that happened on the whole vacation.â
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