· Friday June 18th 2010 ·

On the importance of getting away and taking a break

It’s super-important.

Ser­i­ously, though, I’ve spent the last five weeks with my dom­inant arm in a giant cast. (Although after week two, I regained the use of my elbow and some fin­gers and by week three was able to use an extra couple of fin­gers on my right hand while typing, which has helped. My draw­ings, how­ever, still look like they were done by a five-year-old, and I sign credit card receipts with a squiggle and/or lip­stick kisses.) Mean­while, the work has by no means slowed down, even though my working speed has, and it’s still chal­len­ging to do simple things like make a sand­wich for lunch or empty the garbage.

Accord­ingly, I’ve been working rather long hours and have been becoming intensely stressed out. (Throw in the fact that I’ve quit smoking in sup­port of Bone Healing Power and the fact that I’m some­times still in a good deal of pain–breaking your bones stinks!) Luckily, I have the greatest cli­ents and friends in the world who help me out and under­stand when things take a little longer than they ought, or I’d have gone entirely insane by now.

IslandI am not going here, although I rather wish I were. It’s basic­ally my stress-free island para­dise. Unfor­tu­nately, Croatia is a long drive from here.

So, in the interests of pre­serving that afore­men­tioned sanity, I’m run­ning away to a secret undis­closed island loc­a­tion this weekend, where I’m hoping I won’t be able to get cell-phone ser­vice, and I won’t have any way of leaving until a nice fish­erman comes to get me. My laptop, shock­ingly enough, is staying home (it’s very rarely far from me) and I’m excited by the pro­spect of no elec­tri­city, no emails, and no pos­sible way for me to try to get any work done. I’ve noticed that as I get busier, it’s harder for me to actu­ally take a full day off, in spite of how important it is for my mental well-being.

If you border on the edge of work­aholi­cism, I recom­mend get­ting tough with your­self and for­cing your­self into isol­a­tion. So long as you can return refreshed, and not dreading a massive pile of new emails, it’ll make you so much more pro­ductive in the long run. And so on that note: ciao, amigos!

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