Protect
Yourself with Adequate Boundaries
As a sole proprietor (well, in my case I have a partnership, but it's still nearly
the same) it's vitally important to remember that without YOU, the business doesn't
exist. The most important thing you can do for your business is to take care of
yourself. It's harder for women because traditionally we're used to taking care
of everyone else, first. So
I'm issuing a challenge to all of us: set really good boundaries regarding your
work. These can be boundaries about what kinds of work you'll accept, the deadlines
you're willing to work under, the expectations others have of you, or simply,
how long your workday is. I don't have to tell you where you need to place them
- you already know that!! Boundaries
are a simple and powerful way to honor the quality of what we bring to life, and
ultimately, what we bring to the workplace, and they help insure we don't end
up getting "burnt-out" because of the overwhelming requirements we've taken on.
The really interesting thing about boundaries is that we're the only ones who
can set, enforce and protect them. Expecting others to understand or honor them
requires that we do, too. Most
of us think we have to "power through" on the deadlines, forgetting about lunch,
breaks, or sometimes, about sleep. Believe me, the work will still be there waiting
for you, regardless of whether you take a break or not. I've
finally begun to really understand how important time away is. I still work many
more hours than I thought I would as a small business person (of course I used
to work that many hours in corporate, too), but now I make sure that I "close
up shop" so to speak at or before 6:30 when my husband comes home from work. And
I've begun to take weekends off, too. In fact, I'm experimenting with half-to-full
day Fridays off to compensate for having to teach classes in the evenings. It's
fun, and in the past month I've been able to finish a quilt for our new grandchild
due in February. Taking this time has given me the chance to finish something
that's important to me, my daughter and the new baby. And I've had time to recharge
my batteries. What I always notice when I take those breaks from work is that
I'm so much more refreshed when I pick up the work again. My creativity comes
back, along with my sense of humor!! I
read an alarming statistic not long ago that indicated heart disease, traditionally
a "man's" ailment, is on the rise in women. I think that's because we're all facing
the same kinds of stresses now that men always faced in the working world. Plus,
most of us have even LARGER loads because of our own traditional roles as women.
And those of us who work alone don't even have someone to talk about it with!!
So let's be
smarter, and learn to be very firm about how and where we set our boundaries.
In fact, to be REALLY radical, make your boundary three times bigger than you
think you need. That way you'll have a lot more room for the unexpected that always
seems to crop up. And be firm about "educating" your environment about exactly
where those boundaries begin. A boundary helps to protect the Self in a way that
nothing else can. When you set your boundaries out far enough, you have plenty
of time to ACT rather than just REACT. You protect yourself and the other person,
too. I have
a CPA friend who works from home. When she's working on a project, she puts a
money clip on the bulletin board outside her office so that her husband, who also
works from home, understands that she's unavailable for chitchat during that time.
When the money clip has been moved to inside the office, he can come talk with
her about whatever he thinks is important. A creative boundary that supports them
both!! In many
of my previous jobs, my downfall was not allowing enough room (time, money, flexibility)
for the emergencies. When we set our boundaries and honor ourselves by sticking
to them, the "crisis-management" decreases and we stop feeling so jammed up. And
when we feel more relaxed about ourselves, it's so much easier to share that wonderful
creative spark that's uniquely our own. As women, that sense of contribution is
important, so honor yourself, set firm boundaries, and let that spark be more
available.
©
1999 Katie Darden coach@careerlife.net |
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