Strollerderby

Useful Tips for Work at Home Sanity: Seriously, Do They Even Exist?

Many of the parents I know who have paying jobs actually earn their income by working from home. I am one of those parents and if you are not one, you probably can name five or ten people who are. The bonus, which everyone can rattle off at this point, are having a work schedule that can accommodate picking kids up from preschool and being professional without brushing your teeth. The down side is, well...working from home, which is the nice way of admitting you shove 18 Little People, 24 MatchBox cars and a Dora potty out of the way just to sit in front of your laptop. It may also mean that your "office hours" are nap time, bed time and any time in between that there are shows on with fuzzy characters and without gun violence and nudity.

One of my quests as a WAHM is to find better ways to organize my time, my desk and my attention so that I can be fully present when I'm working and fully present when I'm with my child (Duh?!, say all the WAHPs in the house). That's why I was excited to read a tip that is actually useful in my pursuit to end the "Isn't Elmo hilarious!? Keep watching to see what funny stuff he does while I send two more emails!" litany. This article begins with one home-business owners advice to take 15-minute breaks, even when you're on a roll with work, to spend time with the kids. Since I have the bad habit of going hours without getting up once I crack open the laptop, I was grateful to get a reminder to get up, get the blood moving, get a drink (of water or whatever), maybe even say hello to the most important people in my life. I guess that this tip works best if you have a sitter or some other miraculous caregiving mechanism or don't have an incessant-question-asking toddler.

While the rest of the tips don't really work well for me (I can only imagine trying to convince my 2-1/2 year old to please finish up invoicing my employers so he can get a gold star), maybe the advice to set a schedule, enlist your kids to assist you and childproof your office will be the keys to your own work at home success. And if you have better ideas for achieving WAHBliss, then please, let me know the key to that serenity. Or, for God's sake, at least send your sitter over to my dining room cubicle for a couple of hours.


 


+ DIGG + STUMBLE
Posted Jun 08 2007, 05:57 PM
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Comments

 

Blynch said:

I didn't find the article so helpful either.  Schedule phone calls during nap time?  Not exactly a WAHM revolution.  I think the best thing that has happened to my work from home situation is french doors.  I can close off my office from the rest of the house (ie. 4 & 5 yo girls singing 'pretend opera' at the top of their lungs) but still see what is going on.  However I still conduct interviews (I'm a journalist) from inside my car while it's parked in the garage if I really need quiet (I'm sorry Governor, could you say that again?  The Cheetah Girls interrupted you.)  But I can't really speak to the sanity thing - I'm still looking for ways to achieve that particular aspect of being a WAHM

June 8, 2007 7:19 PM
 

carfree childhood said:

I could never do it.  I find it hard enough to balance my checkbook unless my husband is on hand to keep the kids out of my way.

June 8, 2007 9:30 PM
 

Ettamommy said:

Preschool and late nights. That's the only way I can get anything done.

June 9, 2007 1:39 AM
 

Jane said:

I work at home on Fridays, with no sitter.  K here's the thing about childproofing the office:  we have a PC that sits on the floor, and my 1-yr old is drawn to the power button and keeps turning it off.  But it's one of those big, obtuse PCs that sits vertically, and there's no room for it anywhere but the floor. Drives me nuts!  

June 9, 2007 9:58 AM
 

Jaison said:

A lovely piece of info!

June 23, 2007 9:24 AM

About Jessica Ashley (Sassafrass)

Stop staring at my shoes and read my posts, people. There are more important things in life than adorable heels purchased at reduced designer prices. Like, I don't know, changing the channel from Dragon Tales to Caillou so you have another 22 minutes to read my posts.

in

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