How to do everything Bride's Manual
How to do everything before New Year's Eve: Bride's Manual
Wedding Day / Planning
There are 7 days left until New Year's Eve, which means that you are likely to be in the midst of a pre-holiday bustle, choosing gifts for loved ones and trying to finish all the business this year. The desire to get everything done in 2019 is good motivation, but it can be bad execution. Therefore, we share instructions on how to do everything before the holidays and not to spend all the energy - to read it is necessary.
1. Enter a list of tasks.
To make sure you don't feel like you have enough hands on anything, keep a list of tasks. Write lists of things you need to finish, and cross them off when you're done. Plus write down important details, changes, nuances. You can't keep everything in your head, trust the lists.
2. Do not sacrifice your sleep.
Whatever the load, don't sacrifice sleep in any way. Seven hours' sleep is a guarantee of your health. Believe me, the last thing you need before New Year's Eve is to catch a cold. So soberly assess your strength and do not take away your precious hours of sleep.
3. Don't take over all your business.
Pro activity is commendable, of course, but not when you take over all the affairs, even those that are not meant for you. The most important task not to fall into the abyss of deadlines before the winter holidays - to look at things soberly and assess your strength. Satisfaction with a completed task can be expensive, and on the holidays of strength is no longer left.
4. Arrange breaks
Psychologists recommend using the principle of 20 minutes in those moments when it seems that you do not have time for anything, and the tasks are only added. Whatever the importance of your tasks (except for force majeure), put them aside for 20 minutes and try to disconnect from the annoying reality. Turn off the phone for 20 minutes, go through the log or just take a walk outside. Such a small recharge is necessary for productivity.
5. Don't take on several things at once.
If you chase two birds, you won't catch one, as the famous proverb says. Only some people forget it carefully and take on ten cases at once. The result is unfortunate mistakes and not the result you would like. How do you fight it? Back to point one. Keep the list of tasks according to their urgency and importance, from the most urgent - to less urgent. And so task by task, do the necessary things.
6. Pamper yourself.
Another rule is the principle of encouragement. When we were kids, we used to think that if you did something good, the adults would praise you. This principle can help you even now: to cope with some big and difficult task - arrange a small holiday for yourself: go to the movies, cook a delicious dinner, buy a thing that you have long dreamed of. Such incentives give an incentive to finish the whole list.
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