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How to Make Good Use of Time Pockets

They occur when we’ve got some necessary gap between two tasks. For example:

All too often, we end up simply drumming our heels. But you can put these pockets of time to good use – even when they’re as short as five minutes. Here’s how.

At Work
Even if your job is hectically busy most of the time, you’ll probably have the occasional few minutes when there’s really nothing you can get on with. Perhaps your aging computer has crashed and you have to wait for it to reboot, or maybe you’re waiting for a conference call and can’t start anything involved.

Instead of filing your nails, doodling on post-it notes or making a giant paper-clip chain, here are a few ways to salvage some of those time pockets – in order to make sure the rest of your day goes more smoothly.

Five minutes:

Ten minutes:

Twenty minutes:

At Home
Time pockets often arise at home when you’re waiting for someone or something. Perhaps dinner is over, and there’s twenty minutes until your favourite show is on TV. Maybe you’re ready to leave the house, but your partner is taking a shower. Perhaps a friend has called to say he’s running late.

Rather than mooching around looking bored, or flicking through a magazine, use your pocket of time to sort out something that’s bugging you. Here are some examples:

Five minutes:

Ten minutes:

Twenty minutes:

(If you’ve got a really tiny time pocket, try these life-changing 30-second ideas.)

Out and About

I find that a lot of time pockets arise when I’m out for the day – whether I’m doing something fun, or just running errands. There’s always some time spent waiting in line, or hanging around for a bus or train.

Instead of tapping your feet and glaring at your watch, snatch this bonus time to do something interesting. When you go out for the day, slip a few extras into your purse or bag:

Almost any time you’re waiting around, you can sit or stand quietly and read. If you’re walking or if you get travel sick when reading on a bus or train, then try listening to audio content instead.

Notebooks are great for capturing ideas, for planning, and for making lists. If you’re waiting for ages at the post office, and you’re hitting the grocery store next, use that time to plan out the next week’s meals and make yourself a shopping list. You’ll almost certainly end up saving some cash, because you won’t buy food that doesn’t get used, and you won’t buy on impulse.

What time pockets do you have in your life? How can you use them effectively?

Written on 4/12/2010 by Ali Hale. Ali writes a blog, Aliventures, about leading a productive and purposeful life (get the RSS feed here). As well as blogging, she writes fiction, and is studying for an MA in Creative Writing. Photo Credit: TheGiantVermin
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