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Time Management - Marc Mancini

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Rocks, Blocks, Goals, and Clusters 67<br />

A Few Hints<br />

When you feel sluggish, you can write and do computer work if<br />

you’re composing something interesting. But beware: you’re<br />

likely to make more mistakes and to become mentally saturated<br />

after a brief time. Variety is the key. Movement and innately<br />

interesting activity work well, since they jolt you out of indifference.<br />

Once out of your lethargy, you’ll be able to handle activities<br />

usually reserved for alert states.<br />

When you’re in an energy trough, avoid meetings or calls<br />

where your role is passive. They can be deadly to you. If you<br />

have no choice, force yourself to participate and certainly take<br />

notes. Such actions will help keep you sharp.<br />

Avoid doing any one thing for longer than an hour and a<br />

half. Alertness seems to fluctuate in 90-minute cycles. Beyond<br />

90 minutes, alertness plummets.<br />

Body rhythms seem genetically determined, but they can be<br />

reprogrammed somewhat. Heavy food and carbohydrates (sugars,<br />

especially) will plunge most people into sluggishness. Coffee<br />

and soft drinks (health concerns aside) will briefly increase alertness.<br />

A meal of lean protein energizes most people for hours. A<br />

nap (a luxury rarely affordable in our culture) can snap a person<br />

out of the doldrums. Usually 30 to 40 minutes is enough.<br />

Crossing time zones wreaks havoc on internal body clocks.<br />

It takes about one day per time zone crossed to fully readjust. In<br />

the meantime, your body will try to honor both time zones. (A<br />

good trick is to get plenty of outdoor light in the afternoon and<br />

early evening. The body takes its temporal clues from sunlight.)<br />

Physical performance peaks in the afternoon and early<br />

evening. If you need to remember something for a very long<br />

time, study it in the afternoon. Mornings favor short-term memory.<br />

Your senses become sharpest in the late afternoon and<br />

early evening. Mid-afternoon is the best time to do uncomplicated<br />

or repetitive chores.

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