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 Marriage Partnership, Summer 1998
Squeezed for Time?
Why hoping for a 26-hour day isn't the answer.
by Eileen Silva Kindig
Time, like money, is what
we make of it. Unfortunately, it often takes the loud knock of
calamity at our door to jar us into acknowledging this truth. It's amazing
what an angina attack, followed by a cardiac catheterization, can do to
reorganize your priorities.
Huddled with a close friend in the hospital waiting room during my husband's
surgery to determine the extent of the blockage, I realized that under the
guise of disaster, Eric and I had been handed a golden blessing. God had
given us a chance to choose anew how we would use the remainder of our days.
We could squander our time on overwork, meaningless detail and mind-numbing
pastimes; or we could spend our time with thought, grace and gratitude and
savor the riches it brings.
Time Comes at a
Cost
Of course spending time wisely is easier said than done. When you're up to
your eyebrows in bills, careers, kids, church, friends, clutter and a cat
with allergies, stopping to smell the roses may mean you'll only notice they
need pruning. And who wants to add another item to their "to-do" list?
I'm increasingly convinced, however, that our perceived shortage of time
may be largely of our own making. We talk incessantly about our lack of free
time. Even after Eric's heart scare, he and I are right in there adding to
the chaos of life. Just this past weekend, for example, I was off to Kentucky
to promote my new book, while he worked a trade show in Indianapolis and
our daughter stayed with a family friend.
"We don't have enough time!" we wailed to each other on the phone, knowing
full well that if that excuse got any flimsier it would unravel faster than
a cheap suit. The truth is, we're rich in time. What we sometimes lack is
the backbone to take responsibility for how we choose to spend it.
According to a poll undertaken by the Whirlpool Corporation, 61 percent of
us say we would gladly trade money for more free time. Yet a different study,
conducted by the Family and Work Institute, shows that what we say and what
we do are two entirely different things. In 1991 the institute studied 188
companies and found that, though most of them had liberal policies regarding
work schedules, less than five percent of their employees opted for part-time
work and less than ten percent took advantage of flextime.
It doesn't help either that many of us are blurring the line between our
professional and private lives and creating what sociologist Arlie Hochschild
calls "the third shift." In her book The Time Bind (Metropolitan),
Hochschild asserts that instead of coming home to relax and rejuvenate at
the end of the workday, we're escaping to the office and the assembly line
to get away from the stress of household chores, childcare and the demands
of relationships.
Home makes us feel like unappreciated drudges, while work gives us a buzz.
Besides the money and the freedom from constant emotional demands, work provides
the satisfaction of a job well done, an outlet for creativity, breezy low-demand
camaraderie and intellectual stimulationnot to mention the strong sense
of belonging that many corporations have worked overtime to instill. Knowing
that an employee who feels valued will go the extra mile for the company,
corporate America has sought to simulate in the workplace the warm fuzzies
of a close family.
Even advertisers are taking advantage of this phenomenon. A popular coffee
commercial asks, "You know that place you go from nine to five?" and then
the announcer adds, "That's your easy job."
Most of us who secretly feel that work is less complicated and more fulfilling
than home may not even be aware of it. And if we are, chances are we try
to ignore the fact. After all, it doesn't seem Christian to say that we relish
being at work so we can avoid communicating with our spouse and children!

The truth
is,
we're rich in
time.
What we lack is
the backbone to
take
responsibility
for how we spend
it.

All this dedication to work may be keeping us financially afloat, and it
may even be providing us with a piece of "the good life." But as Hochschild
warns, both our slavish dedication to our jobs and our material advantages
come at a high cost. The less time we spend at home, truly attending to the
needs of our families, the messier our home life gets. The same hours can't
be devoted both to the workplace and accomplishing the work of homelife.
Still, we give our best to our careers while complaining that we don't have
enough time with our families.
Eric and I would still be charging through life like a turbo-powered race
car, living for work, if it hadn't been for the big scare we had earlier
in the year. We now make the time to do something together that we both
lovebrowsing through the new acquisitions at the library. Just a few nights
ago, while browsing, we noticed a woman in a business suit anxiously watching
the clock. The shrill ring of her cell phone broke the silence. "Sorry,"
she mumbled, as she dug through her purse. "Work." Eric and I exchanged glances
that said, "We're glad that's not us anymore."
Hard
Choices
When it comes to regaining control of our time, few of us can chuck our jobs
and live off the land. And most of us wouldn't want to.
"All this talk about escaping to work makes me uncomfortable," admits my
friend Susan, who works full-time as a corporate trainer. "The truth is I
do sometimes use work as an antidote to pain. When the kids or Bob are giving
me grief, it's easier to be at work. Sometimes I feel like I've discovered
what men have known since the dawn of time."
Her husband, Bob, a national sales manager for a mid-sized company, nods
in agreement. "For generations it's been socially acceptable for men to duck
out," he says. "As long as we provided for our families we were pretty much
off the hook." However, these days, the onus is on both husband and wife
to share the load on the homefront.
Bob admits that he and Susan often "buy time" by hiring out jobs they don't
likethe yardwork, the housecleaning. They eat take-out four nights a week
and send their son to a tutor. "Maybe what we're doing," Bob admits, "is
buying our way out of the family time we say we crave."
Even the use of leisure time isn't always a simple proposition. "All my life
I dreamed of having a boat," Bob says. The rub is that he's finding it costs
more to maintain than he realized, and to make the most of his investment
he feels like the family must get to the lake every weekend.
"Even our pleasure is time driven," he notes. "We work like demons to buy
ourselves leisure and rarely have a genuinely relaxed moment."
| Diane and Greg, who live next door to Bob and Susan,
feel much the same way. They speak pensively about needs and wants and how
easy it is to confuse the two.
"So many of our bills are self-created," Greg says. "My brother and his wife
live on $25,000 a year and their house is fully paid off. Last month they
bought a new car and paid cash. We make three times as much and never have
a free dime."
Diane, however, points out that her brother-in-law and his wife might spend
a lot of time together, but they also have a huge garden and lots of animals.
"Take about stuff owning you!" she adds. "I'd just like to find a way to
enjoy life without it being almost a job in itself."
The pursuit of pleasure has indeed become a job in itself, Hochschild writes.
She maintains that free time isn't really free at all. Because it requires
so much discipline, persistence and patience, it not only resembles work,
but it raises our stress level to new heights. Even when we do grab an afternoon
at the lake, chances are we've either brought work along or we're preoccupied
with what needs to be done when we get back. We've become so good at performing
two or more tasks at once (which has spawned the term "time stacking"), we've
forgotten how to allow pauses to reflect on what has happened in our
lives and to anticipate what is yet to come.
Radical Time
Management
While time-management experts emphasize accomplishing more tasks in less
time, author Claire Cloninger makes the radical assertion that we need to
take more time to do fewer tasks. In A Place Called Simplicity
(Harvest House), she says that it's the small daily joysnot scratched-out
tasks on our "to-do" liststhat add meaning, texture and richness to life.
At the end of our short sojourn on Earth, what will we treasurethe corporate
report we compiled during the family camping trip, or the golden autumn day
spent raking leaves with the kids and then jumping in the pile together?
Will we look back and see that our days were filled with obsessive work hours
or anxiety about money? Or will our hearts soar with memories of gathering
around the fireplace telling stories or making a real connection with a teenager?
Cloninger writes about two kinds of timechronos, or clock time,
and kairos, which she calls "God time." Most of us are on a first-name
basis with chronosthose hours that seem to drag and we drag ourselves
through. Chronos time is the discomfort of an hour in the dentist
chair, the drudgery of a Saturday afternoon spent cleaning out the garage
and the boredom of one more interminable meeting. Kairos time, by
contrast, is infused with enthusiasm, a word that comes from the Greek
en and theos, which literally means "filled with God."
Kairos time is when we stop what we are doing, suddenly aware that
we've been surprised by joy.
Eric and I still have a long way to go. But if we've learned anything from
Eric's health crisis, it's this. To get more kairos time in our lives,
we have to make the conscious choice to slow down and allow it to catch up
with us. We also have to temporarily let go of the never-ending "to-do" list,
stop allowing work to be a barrier between us and the people we love, and
commit to being together no matter how loudly the world clamors for our
attention. If that means we sometimes let the dust bunnies and paperwork
multiply, well, they'll still be there when we get back.
Eileen Silva Kindig is a freelance writer who lives in Medina, Ohio. |
8 Ways to
Take
Control of Your Time
Remember who's in
charge
Time is something you manage, not something that manages you. Learn
to think through each time commitment in its entirety. Buy yourself time
to think by asking, "Can I let you know tomorrow?"
Decide what is truly
urgent
Rather than think, "I must get this done now!" try putting it off.
Surprise! Most "urgent" needs aren't really that urgent.
Schedule in
reverse
Put the real priorities on the calendar firstfamily picnic or date
night. Then write in everything else.
Drop one thing from your
schedule
You'll probably let someone down, but look who benefits. Spending
two less days a month as a lunch monitor at your son's school frees you up
for a lunch date with your spouse.
Be, rather than do
Try it for an evening. Think. Pray. Relax in a lawn
chair.
Get your spouse's perspective
Ask your mate to comment on how you're using your time and what seems
to be robbing you of time.
Be honest about your
limitations
Do you find yourself saying "yes" to a project in the hopes that a
weekend will suddenly hold the ten extra hours you'd need to complete it?
You can't manufacture time.
Make a list of your
commitments
Post the list next to the phone or your calendar. A visual reminder
of all that you're involved with will make you think twice before tacking
on something else.
Louise A.
Ferrebee |
Copyright © 1998 by the author or Christianity Today International/Marriage
Partnership magazine. For reprint information call 630-260-6200 or e-mail
mp@marriagepartnership.com.
Summer 1998, Vol. 15, No. 2, Page 42
Marriage Partnership
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