
Changing All Time Stress to Effortless Flow
A 1-2 hour introductory seminar.
Are we stuck with the modern rat race? Is time unalterable,
with pressure somehow built into it? Or is there some aspect
of time that we can change to lessen pressure? Does pressure
somehow depend on our perspective, or whether we like or dislike
what we're doing? Is there any way to eliminate time stress,
any 'zone' in time like the eye of a hurricane? Most time management
seminars don't even ask these questions-questions that are necessary
to deal with our time issues at their root.
In this introductory workshop we will explore the sources
of time pressure, define different types of time, and discuss
the full range of what can be done about time stress.
We'll look at conventional time management (CTM)--ways of determining
goals and priorities, and scheduling efficiently. Although people
generally find CTM helpful, some find it turns up the speed of
time's treadmill. Can we use CTM in a way that won't accelerate
time?
Are there other tools besides CTM? Yes! We'll discuss inner
time management (ITM), which focuses on how we do things
rather than what we're doing. By combining ITM with CTM,
we develop balance, rather than the drivenness that often accompanies
CTM's preoccupation with results. And we can open doorways to
new levels of performance and fulfillment that are simply unavailable
with CTM alone.
You can learn:
- There are six keys to changing all time stress
- You can simultaneously get results and improve health and
well-being
- Conventional time management usually promises more than it
can deliver
- You can directly cut through various feelings that waste
time--confusion, tiredness, indecision, scatteredness, time pressure
and anxiety, and negative emotion
- There are six different levels of mastery of time pressures
- Numerous ITM exercises are available
- You can access a comprehensive, web-based time
management guide
- Peak performance has an element of timelessness
Possible Benefits :
You can learn:
- how to access a comprehensive, web-based guide to articles
and mental and physical exercises that are effective to handle
time management tasks and issues
- how you can combine an emphasis on organizing for bottom-line
results with an emphasis on simultaneously improving health and
well-being
- how conventional time management--including that offered
by Franklin-Covey--usually promises more than it can deliver.
Its effectiveness is limited by being based on the idea that
time flow is an objective reality (rather than a result of personal
learning)
- how you can extend the typical scope of time management by
learning to directly cut through various feelings that waste
time: confusion, tiredness, indecision, scatteredness, time pressure
and anxiety, negative emotion, and our ordinary feeling of time
flowing
- that peak performance has an element of timelessness, and
tracking and diminishing our feelings of time flow is a self-actualizing
means of continuous improvement
- what to focus on to simultaneously optimize productivity,
employee well-being, and quality
- that true peak performance is possible only if we continually
consider how we do things in addition to what we
do.
- characteristics of six different levels of mastery of time
pressures, levels that outline our approach to peak performance
- how to access a leading-edge, free online book and workshop
on deadline pressure
- what training is available in methods that go beyond conventional
time management
Highlights and Key Points:
Conventional time management (CTM) usually deals with breaking
down the workload, determining goals and priorities, planning,
scheduling, and procrastination. CTM doesn't work directly
with emotions, confusion, scatteredness, or tiredness. CTM tries
to handle time pressure and anxiety indirectly by dealing with
which activities we will do, but it usually cannot
work directly with time pressure--or even makes the pressure
worse!--since it is usually unnecessarily based on a paradigm
presuming the 'reality' of linear time flow.
Covey suggests an 'alternative paradigm' based on the importance
of what we do, rather than the urgency of tasks. However, Covey's
purportedly new generation of time management is not qualitatively
different: (1) it still focuses on what tasks we do, and (2)
tasks are presumed to occur within an objective flow of time.
No matter whether tasks are judged by importance or urgency,
and no matter whether determined by means of core principles
or not, by keeping the focus on "what you do and why you
do it," the underlying paradigm of linear time is left intact.
In the inner time paradigm, the enormous variety of our
actual experiences of time and timelessness are considered very
important experiences to be transformed, because rather than
measuring or mirroring some 'external flow', our feeling of time
passing (FTP) measures how much we're separate from, or even
resisting what we're doing, and is the aggregate result of
resisting past negative experiences. Only this paradigm can
open the door to true peak performance.
Research has shown that tracking and diminishing our FTP
turns out to be a self-actualizing means of continuous improvement
that simultaneously drives productivity, employee well-being,
and quality.
My web site offers a guide for almost all time management
issues, including a leading-edge, free online book and workshop
on deadline pressure. To my knowledge, no one else is offering
anything like these resources.
We simultaneously optimize productivity, quality, and health
and well-being by continuously increasing our involvement in
whatever is at hand, whatever we're doing, whether work or play.
We notice the transition points where our involvement could either
increase or decrease, and then choose a direction of increasing
involvement. Isn't this the natural way that we make progress
without even thinking about it?
Tracking involvement as an indicator of progress has none
of the side-effects of using simple productivity as a measure
of progress.
Different levels of mastery of time pressures are possible:
- One level is being completely at the effect of the pressure,
perhaps thinking that it's normal. It results from not knowing
and practicing CTM skills for determining priorities and organizing
work.
This is like being at the mercy of tornadoes, with no way to
escape their fury.
- Another level involves practicing CTM skills. However,
there's still time pressure. This seems to be the level where
a good part of the workforce is today.
This is like having a vehicle so you can drive away from tornadoes.
You don't really affect or change the tornado, but you're no
longer completely at its mercy either.
- Another level involves knowing that it's possible to transform
virtually all time pressure into invigorating and productive
energy. Very few people see this as a possibility--this is taken
up in the Taking the Pressure Out of Deadlines.
This is like finding that a tornado has an off button. However,
you don't know where the button is, so you still can't significantly
affect or change the tornado.
- Another level involves the ability to take a break from
whatever you're doing and focus on building pressure and reduce
its intensity by 50%. This seems to require some consistent
practice of the methods in Taking the Pressure
Out of Deadlines.
This is like knowing how to turn a tornado on and off.
- Another level involves being able to reduce the intensity
of time pressure by 50% while maintaining or improving your original
level of productivity--without taking a break. This seems
to require a natural and stable balance resulting from long-term
practice of methods taught by the TSK
Association.
This is like knowing how to find the peaceful yet most productive
eye at the center of a tornado.
- There's a final level where pressure never even gets firmly
established in experience.
Results in No Time is probably the only "one-stop
time management shop;" it addresses the full spectrum
of time management problems and tasks. It integrates CTM with
inner time management (ITM) techniques and perspectives, not
promising as CTM usually does to solve time control problems
solely by identifying values and goals and organizing effectively,
and not rejecting thinking about the future and using watches,
as ITM usually does.
I'll beat any major vendor's price on training and organizers/materials.
In particular, I'll teach a Franklin or Covey course with their
materials/organizers at a lower cost--and without the limitations
of the linear time paradigm.
My mission with RiNT is to help people handle all the different
types of problems they have with time, or because of time. Along
most of the range of human performance I effectively combine
an emphasis on organizing for bottom-line results with an emphasis
on simultaneously improving health and well-being of the employee.
I combine CTM, which is concerned about what we do, with
ITM, which addresses how we do things.


RESULTS IN NO TIME
email: stevrandal@aol.com
phone & fax: 510-690-0490
land: 3867 Oakes Drive, Hayward CA 94542


RESULTS IN NO TIME
email: stevrandal@aol.com
phone & fax: 510-690-0490
land: 3867 Oakes Drive, Hayward CA 94542