Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Hotlinks

Here are links to a favorite site & blog by Summer Pierre, author of The Artist in the Office.

http://www.summerpierre.com/blog.html

http://www.summerpierre.com/

If you're serious about both your livelihood and your vocation/passion, her book is a must. Besides making a good case for not hating your day job, she gives numerous suggestions for making your job (and entire life, really) a work of art. Pierre's illustrations make the book visually appealing and easy to read.

It's funny - I started this blog because I couldn't find anything online or in print by people who were basically happy with their jobs but had other things going as well. All the websites I came up with when I queried "day jobs" focused on the "how to sell your novel so you can quit your job" theme. These past 6 or so months, however, I'm meeting and reading from more and more people like Pierre, artists who want to live an integrated life where every element feeds the others.

Synchronicity? Maybe the world is finally ready for the idea that a person can do more than one thing well.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Keeping Boredom at Bay

Some jobs are so stressful so much of the time that having an after-hours life is hard because you're always recovering from adrenaline peaks and crashes. I've had a few gigs like that. Others are so repetitive and monotonous that your mind goes into hibernate mode. Done that too. It's hard to say which extreme is worse, in terms of being fully awake and able to make the most of your day.

Here are a few tricks for keeping boredom at bay, or at least the ones I've found most useful:
  • Each workday, determine to find something you can use for your after-hours project or passion. It could be a piece of information, a resource, someone who's done something similar and can help you, a new website or FB page where you can connect to like-minded others, supplies/equipment...anything that helps you along. Make a habit of this and you'll start to feel like you're on a perpetual hunt for buried treasure.
  • Pretend that your next job is destined to be the perfect one for you, but in order to find it, you have one condition to fulfill: master the job you have now and learn to love it.
  • Pretend that your current job is your dream job, according to God/Fate/the Universe. Try living one day as though you're in the perfect situation.
  • Every hour on the hour, stop and take three slow mindful breaths. Say to yourself, "Here I am." This simple Zen exercise will remind you that you're here, not in your home studio, on a tropical island or wherever your daydreams have taken you.
  • See if you can learn one new skill, even a small one. Just because.
  • Each workday, decide to make one person's life better somehow because of what you do at work that day.
I'll have more ideas later. These are a start.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Preventative Care - Yoga

The single best way I know of making sure that your body can handle all your activities - being on your feet, lifting, bending, pushing, pulling at work, then going on to a full evening - is to make sure you're in good shape to begin with. One extremely effective way of getting there is through yoga or better yet, a mashup of yoga and pilates.

You don't need to be able to jog five miles without pausing or bench press 200 lbs to be fit for work and life. You do need a back that's both strong and flexible enough to handle OTJ activity, great posture (slumping causes lower back pain) and stamina. One program that has it all is Jonathan Urla's Yogilates workouts (yogilates.com). His DVDs (level 1 & 2 are approximately one hour, level 3 is 80 minutes) blend practical yoga postures for flexibility and pilates exercises for core strength into seamless routines. And unlike moderate or high impact workout, they don't stress joints - an important consideration if you're a food server, sales associate or nurse and your knees are already taxed to the max.

If you prefer a more social setting, sign up for a class. For good results, go to class or do your routine at home at least 3 days a week. If you've never exercised before or have done it only sporadically, consider starting out under the supervision of an instructor.

Here's my down-and-dirty routine, the one I do if I have only 15 minutes that day. Even that 15 minutes makes a huge difference in my energy level and how I feel after work:
  • Forward bend, sitting - feet pointed, then flexed.
  • Hurdle stretch - point/flex.
  • Straddle stretch - point/flex.
  • Plough & shoulder stand.
  • Bridge & Fish.
  • Side twists.
  • And if I have time, the upright pidgeon pose.
This short routine hits all the body parts likely to get cranky during the course of eight hours of soldiering on - upper and lower back, knees, ankles and shoulders.

Try taking a yoga-pilates class once or twice weekly, do as much of the routine as you can remember (or get a DVD) for half and hour twice a week, and take a 20-minute walk during lunch break. See if this changes how you feel...and how productive you are at work and at Work.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Protecting Your Physical Energy - Breathe!

One way to rev up at the end of a long workday when you have plans for the night is to give your brain an infusion of oxygen. Here are a few breath exercises I've gleaned from various yoga classes over the years:

  • Diaphramatic breathing: Sit up straight, breathe in as if your lungs are balloons, and breathe out as if you're deflating them. Let breath go all the way to the bottom of your lungs. You should feel and see your rib cage expanding.
  • Alternate-nostril breathing: Close your right nostril by pinching it shut and breathe in through your left nostril. Breathe out through your left, then pinch it shut and inhale-exhale through your right nostril. Keep alternating.
  • Hissing Snake: Take an enormous breath in, letting your chest and abdomen expand all the way. Hold for the count of 8. Exhale by hissing through your teeth slowly.
You can also pause every hour, on the hour and take 3-5 deep slow breaths. Like sipping water throughout the day, this will help you stay alert.