Forget resolutions, ease time management stress by doing less, says researcher - Action News
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Montreal

Forget resolutions, ease time management stress by doing less, says researcher

New Year's Day marks a fresh start and new resolutions for many Canadians, but a Montreal-based time management expert says it's time to rethink the annual tradition.

It's time to make more time for ourselves, says Concordia University's Brad Aeon

fireworks in Montreal
While Montreal's traditional fireworks are a great way to celebrate the start of 2019, a researcher says its time to nix the tradition of writing New Year's resolutions. (Graham Hughes/Canadian Press)

Eat less. Exercise more. Support charities. Improve finances. Volunteer. Travel. Spend time with family.The list goes on.

New Year's Day marks a fresh start and newresolutions for many, but a Montreal-based time management researcher atConcordiasays it's time to rethink thatannual tradition.

It's time for "anti-resolutions" instead, said Brad Aeon, aPhDcandidate at the JohnMolsonSchool of Business who focuses onthe psychologicalimpacts of time management theory.

"When we make a new resolution, we decide to spend more time going to the gym, developing a new skill, developing a new habit and all those things take time,"he told CBC Montreal'sAll in a Weekend.

"Why not do the exact opposite? Why not disengage from the activities or commitments that we already have? You know, just to have more free time or more time that we have just to ourselves."

Every year, he added,millions of people make new resolutions, but, every year, "millions of people complain about not having enough time."

Beating time-management stress

While 50 per cent of working,childless adultscomplain about not having enough time, Aeon said 60 per cent of parents complain about the same thing.

One woman recently told Aeon that she works 35 hours a week and her kids are all grown up, but it's actually her volunteer work at a legal clinic that was eating up all her time.

That's when he got to thinking a lot of our time-related stress is self-imposed.

Aeon saidwork hours haven't changed much over the last half century. In fact, people, especiallymen, have more leisure time than they used to.

"I find it amazing that most of the people that I know that complain about working too muchactually impose that overwork on themselves," he said. "And it's the same thing with our leisure."

Let go of the FOMO

One of the big differences between now and 50 years ago, he said, is people have more flexibility mixed with a deep-seated fear of missing out a modern-day phobia known byitsacronym as FOMO.

Brad Aeon says it's time people do nothing more and ditch the self-imposed time pressure that, in the long run, can do more harm than good. (BradAeon.com)

While people once had to be home at a certain time to catch their favourite television program, today's technology lets us binge watch series after series for hours on end.

So much so, that some resort to"speed watching" by increasing the frame rate up to two fold, he said.

In that way, people even put pressure on themselves to stay updated on popular programming and, Aeonsaid, "making new resolutions is another form of self-imposed time pressure."

Trying to reach new goals is good, he said, but only if you have the time.

"Time pressure is not good because it has huge repercussions onmental health," he said. "We impose too much time pressure on ourselves."

Instead of wearing workloadas a badge of honour, Aeon, who has been scaling back his own weekly work hours, suggests scheduling in some regularprocrastination time.

He says he tries to spend two to four hours a week just lying on the couch orlooking out the window just doing nothing.

"I know there's a huge pressure for us to always act busy," he said. "But I think we should resist that as much as we can, because it's not good for us."

With files from CBC Montreal's All in a Weekend