My least favorite chore of the spring is shoveling the gravel back onto the driveway after a winter of snow plowing. #Chores #VermontSpring
My least favorite chore of the spring is shoveling the gravel back onto the driveway after a winter of snow plowing. #Chores #VermontSpring
Balance
Recently at work I got two somewhat related questions from two different mentees:
Before I dive into my answers, I should do a few disclaimers. As a formality, these opinions are my own and do not represent those of my employer. I have almost 20 years of experience as a full-time software engineer, entirely at two companies, with another 10 years or so of varied computer and coding experience before that. This is what works for me, a privileged straight white dude, and is definitely not intended as one-size-fits-all advice… so with all that non-universality out of the way hopefully you’ll still find something in here useful.
Really it all comes down to managing my time to prioritize family and to keep work notifications at bay.
Keeping Up
I think the first question was rooted in the illusion that I’m in every meeting and responding to every Slack or email thread. I’m really not! In fact it’s very important at the level of senior engineer and beyond to scale yourself by delivering through others. I know what I can skip in part because I know who I can trust to represent my point of view when I’m unavailable.
I’m also not overworking — it’s very rare that I’m working more than 40 hours (except maybe when I used to be oncall; looking at you, log4j week). I do often time shift to address some work early or late in my time zone which reserves time for the occasional school event, work lunch, or most days, family evening time.
The informal technique I’ve converged on is more or less just aggressive message triage. I tend to read via “pull” (that is, when I have time to catch up, I skim through all of my recents) as opposed to “push” (responding to messages as they come in). It’s a bit of an Inbox Zero Lite, and more aligned with Merlin’s more recent thinking. I don’t fully read everything, but I look at it enough to decide if it needs more of my attention.
If I miss something with this method, and it’s important, it will come back; I apologize for the miss, check for technique corrections, and move on. I also note that I do not use any kind of generative AI summarization for handling any of this load; the risk of missed or non-existent facts appearing in the summarization is too much of a risk.
For email I have over 100 rules defined; many of them delete automatic emails that are near realtime status updates for information I can get elsewhere. Mostly my work email is for meeting invites and related prep work or follow up. It’s rare for an email to require a longer written response; if one is required I’ll set aside time to write that, since it’s likely to be a bigger cross-team escalation anyway where attention to detail is important.
I also don’t allow email to my phone, just my synced calendar.
Meetings
Almost every meeting I’m in is hybrid, between people working in different offices in different time zones, time shifted commutes, and occasional sickness. For meetings, I apply several different techniques:
I do wish there was a more automated way of handling my scheduling heuristics because it seems like something a computer could rebalance for me a few days ahead, the way I do manually at present.
Documents
Amazon is a narrative writing company, so a lot of documents come my way. Often these are coupled to a review meeting, so for the most part I read them as part of the meeting. Sometimes there will be a quick follow up review via email or Slack; instead of responding to those notifications right as they come in, I try to set aside reading time at the start and end of my day where I can quickly empty that “inbox” and get feedback back to the writers. Some document questions come to my office hours.
Slack
For Slack, I use the Unread view as my primary interface. (I was initially very skeptical of the newer cards interface on mobile; I’ve come to like it, other than the way it handles loading long threads.) I have my many many channels sorted and grouped so that the priority order is more or less:
Usually I just mark as read anything that isn’t relevant to me or for which I see a more appropriate person is already engaged. For the rest it’s a lot of open discussion, leading to a decision, a longer doc write up, or a meeting.
I do let Slack send me notifications, but only during the work day, and generally that is just a volumetric indicator (unless it’s from a few select people or an update from a meeting that’s about to happen, like switching conference rooms).
Posting
I think a lot of what helps me keep up is that I’m a fast reader and good writer; some of that might be the luck of some innate brain stuff but more likely it’s just lots and lots of practice, with some native English speaker and neurotypical privilege thrown in. I do think my primarily online socializing helps me here; I’m often quickly consuming text and deciding what’s interesting enough to engage with or not. I know how to post and how to consume and those skills are surprisingly work relevant in today’s office environment.
Keeping Going
The second question is more open ended and can be interpreted in a few ways. I heard it as “what gives you energy”, and more about what I do when not at work to recharge. (It does help that, in spite of the meeting load I whine about sometimes, the work remains full of interesting problems to solve while working with really skilled people.)
I think one part of it I alluded to earlier, which is that I prioritize family time, especially in the early evening after work. We might chat about our day over dinner, fit in a game, listen to some music, or check through some homework together.
There are of course days where I don’t feel like I have the juice to make one more decision; that’s where another part comes in. I really find household chores to be a good way to “reset” my brain. There’s something about the scope of the task, following a procedure, and achieving a result in a few minutes that gets me the right dopamine hit or something. Usually my duties include folding laundry (or sorting and starting a new load) or loading the dishwasher and cleaning the kitchen after dinner. As you may have noted from other posts here I cook sometimes, which is usually similarly relaxing.
There’s obviously some privilege built into this around being more career established and setting boundaries on my work time, and working in an industry with more flexible scheduling. I also have the added support of my wife being a writer and stay-at-home parent; she takes care of many things (often with spreadsheets) which helps us balance our various home and pet and child care tasks.
In terms of “me time”, catching up with friends online, playing games, and reading tend to be my main entertainments when we’re not doing things all together.
Keeping On
That’s a little bit of what works for me to keep going and keep up with all of the information that flies my way.
-Laundry done.
-New undies and earpads arrived.
-More laundry done.
-Floors swept and wiped (couldn't mop).
-Bedding changed.
-One rug laundered.
-Other rug given a good thrashing (that was fun).
-Windows cleaned.
-Coconut milk alternative made.
-All drying done.
-Kitchen counters and sink nuked.
-Dinner made.
-Dinner munched.
-Clothes put away.
-Headphones cleaned, and earpads changed.
-New rates for rent received. £314. Per week.
-Emails from staff re: damp remediation and construction work received. They're not coming, haven't explained why, and haven't made plans for coming again.
Today has been long and I haven't spoken to another sentient body-haver for three days.
I'm anthropomorphising my kitchen implements. Well, at least my place is hospital clean.
I’m looking into simple kids bank accounts where they can manage their pocket money and maybe be incentivised to do chores. I’ve stumbled across https://roostermoney.com/
Does anyone have any thoughts / experience?
#kids #parenting #pocketmoney #chores #money #finance
https://cheezburger.com/39475461/26-fabulous-feline-funnies-for-pawcrastinating-people
#AI images of cats doing human chores and having random human thoughts. #cats #chores #humor
When you have disabilities, you fall behind in many tasks. Dusting, cleaning, washing, maintenance... This is the way of things.
Limited number of spoons, limited applications for them, and, especially for those of us with dynamic disabilities, some days even arrive with complimentary surprise trucks to run us over - before we get out of bed!
Only the most important of tasks for our health and wellbeing are completed, and only as we are able. Sometimes we can make a start towards making up that gap, but falling behind consistently can make you feel like subhuman trash. We certainly need to have our own satisfactory or good-enough-for-now standards. And remember that we are doing our best every single day.
Unless they are willing to help by doing some of our chores, abled folk have no place criticising disabled folk for what they are not able to sustain. And that goes for the internalised ableism of the disabled folks minds too.
#disability
#chores
#standards
#ableism
Dusty McSternface says, "It's -5° and snowing. It's a good time to dust, vacuum, wash dishes, do laundry, and do taxes."
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Bye, Dusty... until next time...
Can’t believe I mowed the lawn for the first time this season in February! #chores #gardening
I've said it before. Going to say it again.
I owe many drinks to the person who invented the dishwasher gel.
Cheers. Salute.
Good morning tooting friends. It’s a lovely cool & damp 22c & heading to 31c with more storms forecast & it’s a bit humid, but fine. There is a little rain skirting around us, I will have to wait & see if anything hits #Weather.
I have all my washing out, if the rain stays away it should dry. If it doesn’t I’ll just put it in the garage. No big deal. It’s so nice outside I was able to have a really good forage among my tomato & cucumber
plants & found a lot of hidden goodies that I’d missed during my quick looks during the week. I’m going to enjoy just puttering around doing the household & garden #Chores. I think I need to make a delivery of some cucumbers to the family today, but all the tomatoes are mine - all mine
.
Hope everyone has a wonderful #Saturday keep cool wherever it’s hot, stay dry wherever it’s wet. Crazy weather in #Australia .
we finished finally the laundry after some fckn troubles with the washing machine #laundryday #cow #miniature #ComfortItems #plushies #chores
one good thing about being unable to sleep for a long time is that I generaly take the trash and/or recycle out by 11:30pm and tonight I decided to nap first and I woke up at about 10:30.
so I’m still on schedule but I probably should gather up the trash/recycle in my own room and dress warmly since it seems to be 21°F out there.
see you later if I don’t succumb to frostbite.
Missouri farmers hope for mental health support https://www.byteseu.com/592714/ #AgWorkers #Agriculture #breaking #CareyMentalHealth #CareyPortell #chores #ChristmasNews #CubaMisosuri #farm #FarmMentalHealth #farmer #FarmerHealth #farmers #Health #mental #MentalHealth #mind #Missouri #NearDeath #News #recovery #St.CharlesCounty #St.LouisAg #St.LouisChristmas #St.LouisFarm #workers
So I've started washing dishes with a basin for rinsing and the sink filled with soapy water instead of letting the faucet run. I did this mostly for ecological reasons but a surprise benefit is that sensory wise, it is far more enjoyable. I really like water and instead of being hit with it, dipping my hands to wash in the hot water and then contrasting with the cold in the basin is really nice. It's almost relaxing to wash dishes now instead of stressful & torturous
#cleaning #chores #dishes
Washing machine finishes the most recent wash whilst I'm working from home. I can't empty it and put stuff out to dry right now, so I make a mental note do do it in a little bit.
As soon as I make this decision, the machine disappears from existence. The washing never existed. I don't think about the washing until the end of the day.
Upon remembering the washing (now damp smelling), I set the washing machine off again. It will be ready before bedtime.
Guess what happens, everyone? Guess.
I'm doing the laundry again tomorrow morning.
The cycle continues.
Woke up at 5 AM due to the Puke Duke (the GG, Gaming Gremlin, somewhat of a cat I guess) being the Puke Duke and decided to get ahead with the daily chores.
Now chores are done and I have some time before work, so... Coffee or Powernap?
What do you reckon?