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6 Essential Tips for
Working Mothers
By
Kelly Nault, M.A.
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"A mother's work is never done"
(sigh). Just when you think you're through, you find you've only
just begun. You aren’t the only one!
If the pressure of balancing your work and parenting is
ultimately leading you to give both your work and family less,
it is time to find a new parenting strategy and quick! When a
work from home mom decides to set clear boundaries and manage
her time effectively she can dramatically reduce parenting
stress and boost her parenting joy. So let’s get started.
Six Essential Work Life Survival Parenting Tips for
the Work at Home Mom (WAHM)
Your happiness as a work at home mom (WAHM) depends on your
commitment to following these six parenting time management
tips:
-
Ban your open door policy. Set your work hours and
stick with them. Unless your job requires you to answer the
phone, answer it only on your schedule. A work at home mom (WAHM)
has no time for distractions (especially from your kids and
spouse—likely your biggest distractions). This only leads to
low productivity. Make certain every member of your
household knows the times of day when you are and are not
available for interruptions and stick with this schedule.
-
Involve your family in what you do.
Talk about what you do, ask your family to help solve work
problems (children often find very creative solutions), and
let them help you with small jobs like licking envelopes.
One work at home mom I know asked her nine year old daughter
to answer the business telephone when the receptionist
called in sick, on one of their biggest sales days. This
boosted her daughter's self-esteem and also helped her
appreciate how her mother's work put a roof over her head,
food in her mouth and clothes on her back.
-
Consciously make the transition from work to home.
When it is family time, focus on the family. Make certain
you have cleared the work cobwebs from your head. Write down
your to-do list for the next day and ask yourself before you
leave your desk, "How can I make my time with my family
special?" Then smile and give them a hug when you see them.
Too tired? Take a 20 minute cat nap, a quick walk, meditate
for a short while or say a little prayer to let go of your
day, so you can be all they deserve you to be.
-
Remember it's about quality time, not quantity time.
When you are with your family, be with your family. Leave
work behind so you can focus on them. "Light up" as soon as
they come into the room and find fun ways to do mealtimes,
and even clean-up times together. Half an hour of positive
can prevent dozens of hours of misbehavior.
-
Solve misbehavior time-wasters.
As a family counselor, I regularly hear variations on the
complaint, "My kids are driving me crazy, but I'm too crazy
to find time to learn how to stop them from driving me
crazy." There are simple ways to motivate your children to
want to be well behaved. Invest the time now, so you don't
spend more time and frustration later on (which of course
takes away from time you can devote to your work).
-
Schedule your self-care time.
The most critical key to your WAHM success is to nurture
some of your needs so you can continually renew your passion
for parenting. You need time to replenish your energy so you
can be more efficient, productive and happy. With so much on
your plate it is essential that you schedule a minimum of 20
minutes a day for you. Before or after the kids are in bed
is generally the easiest to stick with.
By
the way, if putting your self-care needs first makes you feel
guilty and selfish, then don't do it for you—do it for your
family. It is time that your self-care became a necessity, not a
luxury so you can give more to all you do—at both work and home.
Remember that if you are emotionally and physically healthy, you
will be able to give more quality time to your family.
The
six parenting time-management tips above will allow even the
busiest work at home mom to finally have her cake and eat it
too. By successfully balancing work and family, you will model
for your children a fulfilled and healthy woman and your family
will no longer have to deal with a "burnout-mom" but a happy
one!
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*********************************************
Kelly Nault, MA award winning parenting of When You’re
About To Go Off The Deep End, Don’t Take Your Kids With You
inspires moms to put themselves first—for the sake of their
children. She shares time-tested tools that motivate children to
want to be well behaved, responsible and happy! Sign up for her
free online parenting course here.
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© 2006-07 Ultimate Parenting.
All rights reserved. |
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