Itsoneworld Article World.
Translate Page To German Tranlate Page To Spanish Translate Page To French Translate Page To Italian Translate Page To Japanese Translate Page To Korean Translate Page To Portuguese Translate Page To Chinese
  Number Times Read : 5      
Categories

Advice (598)
Aging (263)
Arts (39)
Arts and Crafts (732)
Automotive (1387)
Break-up (92)
Business (4109)
Business Management (632)
Cancer Survival (95)
Career (393)
Cars and Trucks (1)
Cheating (41)
Coding Sites (4)
Computers (3)
Computers and Technology (2320)
Cooking (149)
Crafts (0)
Culture (170)
Current Affairs (121)
Databases (0)
Death (22)
Education (747)
Entertainment (749)
Etiquette (32)
Family Concerns (815)
Finances (3872)
Food and Drinks (613)
Gardening (414)
Healthy Living (54)
Holidays (0)
Home (9)
Home Management (2394)
Internet (4902)
Jobs (325)
Leadership (39)
Legal (509)
Medical (109)
Medical Business (323)
Medicines and Remedies (1740)
Men Only (0)
Motorcyles (0)
Opinions (200)
Our Pets (2)
Outdoors (4)
Parenting (558)
Pets (1131)
Recreation (1556)
Relationships (1799)
Religion (146)
Self Help (1132)
Self Improvement (24)
Society (959)
Sports (1070)
Staying Fit (1)
Technology (4)
Travel (2484)
Web Design (6)
Weddings (1)
Wellness, Fitness and Di (3561)
Women Only (5)
Womens Interest (1041)
World Affairs (119)
Writing (505)
 
Stats
Total Articles: 46146
Total Authors: 5136
Total Downloads: 330000


Newest Member
John Savage
 


   

Rule 26: Focus



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.itsoneworld.com/rss.php?rss=374
By : L. Lowell    4 or more times read
Submitted 2008-08-20 23:15:55
Shea Fialdini lives in Seattle with her husband and three children. She works as the Grants Manager for the Global Health Program at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

As a working mom I thought I was beginning to master the fine art of productive multi tasking until my three year old son set me straight.

One day when I was trying to do too many things at one time including getting him a bowl of ice cream for dessert. Apparently it wasn’t working for him. He looked directly into my face and said “focus!” I laughed it off at the time thinking it was just a cute comment, but I found myself hearing that little voice in my head over and over again, especially when I was trying to do too much.

Like everyone I play a lot of roles in my life; I’m a wife, mother, daughter, manager, professional, sister, friend, etc. These roles all come with responsibilities and demands that make it challenging to pay attention to what’s in front of me at any given moment.

As I go to work each day and come home again I find the transition from my role as a mother to working professional and back to a mother again to be particularly humbling and humorous at the same time. The stark contrast between these two parts of my life can make me feel a little nutty sometimes.

It never ceases to amaze me that within the span of two hours I can go from having a conversation with my son about why he can pee standing up, but he can’t try to poop the same way; to sitting in a conference room with three other people discussing the finer points of financial risk management in international grant making. Both conversations are critically important in their own right, but the contrast is so jarring it’s enough to give me whiplash.

I love how my roles as a mother and as a professional stretch me in new directions and inspire me in different ways. I find this time in my life to be both profoundly challenging and deeply rewarding.

My ability to balance the vastly different demands of being a working mom greatly depends on my capacity to be fully present and “in the moment.” This means leaving the Blackberry in the car when I’m at home (or at least not reaching for it until the kids are in bed), and not worrying about how much laundry I have to do, or what I’m going to cook for dinner when I’m in a meeting.

The happiness of my family, success of my career, and mental stability are all highly dependent on my ability to give my full attention to the person or project that’s in front of me. So when I find myself thinking about my grocery list in the middle of a staff meeting or worrying about a presentation during dinner with my family I try to remember that little voice saying “focus.”

As excerpted from 42 Rules (tm) for Working Moms Super Star Press, 2008.
Author Resource:- Laura Lowell is the executive editor and author of "42 Rules for Working Moms." She has gathered practical advice and information from working moms all over the world to share with others. She lives and works in Silicon Valley with her husband and two girls. http://www.42rules.com/working_moms/index
Article From Itsoneworld Article World

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
New Members
select
Sign up
select
Learn more
 
Nav Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites

 
Sponsors