In trying to find the life/work balance, I thought about how different people have different approaches. Many see accumulation of money as a first step in achieving other goals, but sometimes those goals can be achieved with less money than we think if we prioritize them directly.
When I thought about what I wanted, I thought things like - if I was rich, I could find time to exercise, get a trainer, have a personal cook and than it would be easier to be in great shape.
But when we made exercise a priority, with just one personal training session a week(on my lunch break), a repeat of that 2 days later without the trainer, running, and healthy cooking we were able to get results that I thought you needed to be rich to achieve (pregnancy set that back of course, but I know the lifestyle and have no doubt I will get back to it after the baby is born).
Or, spending time with family. This was a big one and a really hard one to achieve. We focused on flexibility at work. Between the 2 of us, in the month of June 13 out of 24 weekdays, one parent was at home. Travel comp time, compressed schedule, work from home, medical appointments, etc...
And it is a big percentage of time every month (I just tracked it this month).
After the baby is born, I will be taking significant amount of time to stay home. This will cause us to forfeit money, and we will need to be taking it out of savings to cover the shortfall. Of course, we had to save that money first in order to be able to do it, but we did not have to get rich first. Instead, we used the direct approach - what are the goals that are most important, and what are the ways we can achieve them?
It is better than comparing yourself to others, less or more fortunate. It is about what you want, and I think it helps to focus energy on those things, instead of wasting it on arbitrary benchmarks or some vague definition of success.
Of course, money is important because things like quality of education, child care and health care are very often directly impacted by resources you have, at least in this country. And these are basic things needed for security and well being.
But my point it, in many goals, sometimes there is a shortcut if the goal is tackled directly.
When I thought about what I wanted, I thought things like - if I was rich, I could find time to exercise, get a trainer, have a personal cook and than it would be easier to be in great shape.
But when we made exercise a priority, with just one personal training session a week(on my lunch break), a repeat of that 2 days later without the trainer, running, and healthy cooking we were able to get results that I thought you needed to be rich to achieve (pregnancy set that back of course, but I know the lifestyle and have no doubt I will get back to it after the baby is born).
Or, spending time with family. This was a big one and a really hard one to achieve. We focused on flexibility at work. Between the 2 of us, in the month of June 13 out of 24 weekdays, one parent was at home. Travel comp time, compressed schedule, work from home, medical appointments, etc...
And it is a big percentage of time every month (I just tracked it this month).
After the baby is born, I will be taking significant amount of time to stay home. This will cause us to forfeit money, and we will need to be taking it out of savings to cover the shortfall. Of course, we had to save that money first in order to be able to do it, but we did not have to get rich first. Instead, we used the direct approach - what are the goals that are most important, and what are the ways we can achieve them?
It is better than comparing yourself to others, less or more fortunate. It is about what you want, and I think it helps to focus energy on those things, instead of wasting it on arbitrary benchmarks or some vague definition of success.
Of course, money is important because things like quality of education, child care and health care are very often directly impacted by resources you have, at least in this country. And these are basic things needed for security and well being.
But my point it, in many goals, sometimes there is a shortcut if the goal is tackled directly.
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