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How to ______1______your free time When people find out I write about time management, They assume two things. One is that I'm always _____2_____ time, and I'm not. I have four small children, and I would like to blame them for my occasional tardiness, but sometimes it's just not their fault. I was once late to my own speech on time management. We all had to just take a moment together and savor that irony. The second thing they assume is that I have lots of ______3_____ and tricks for saving bits of time here and there. Sometimes I'll hear from magazines that are doing a ___4____ along these lines, generally on how to help their readers find an extra hour in the day. And the idea is that we'll shave bits of time off everyday activities, add it up, and we'll have time for the good stuff. I question the entire premise of this piece, but I'm always interested in hearing what they've come up with before they call me. Some of my favorites: doing errands where you only have to make right-hand turns 、 Being extremely judicious in microwave usage: it says three to three-and-a-half minutes on the package, we're totally getting in on the bottom side of that. And my personal favorite, which makes sense on some level, is to DVR your favorite shows so you can fast-forward through the commercials. That way, you save eight minutes every half hour, so in the course of two hours of watching TV, you find 32 minutes to exercise. Which is true. You know another way to find 32 minutes to exercise? Don't watch two hours of TV a day, right? Anyway, the idea is we'll, save bits of time here and there, add it up, we will finally get to everything we want to do. But after studying how successful people spend their time and looking at their schedules hour by hour, I think this idea has it completely backward. We don't build the lives we want by saving time. We build the lives we want, and then time saves itself. Here's what I mean. I recently did a time diary project looking at 1,001 days in the lives of extremely busy women. They had demanding jobs, sometimes their own businesses, kids to care for, maybe parents to care for, community commitments...busy, busy people. I had them keep track of their time for a week, so I could add up how much they worked and slept, and I interviewed them about their strategies, for my book. One of the women whose time log I studied...she goes out on a Wednesday night for something. She comes home to find that her water heater has broken, and there is now water all over her basement. If you've ever had anything like this happen to you, you know it is a hugely damaging, frightening, sopping mess. So she's dealing with the immediate aftermath that night, next day she's got plumbers coming in, day after that, professional cleaning crew dealing with the ruined carpet. All this is being recorded on her time log. Winds up taking seven hours of her week. Seven hours. That's like finding an extra hour in the day. But I'm sure if you had asked her at the start of the week, "Could you find seven hours to train for a triathlon?" "Could you dind seven hours to mentor seven worthy people?" I'm sure she would've said what most of us would've said, which is, "No...can't you see how busy I am?" Yet when she had to find seven hours because there is water all over her basement, she found seven hours. And what this shows us is that time is highly elastic. We cannot make more time, but time will stretch to accommodate what we choose to put into it. And so the key to time management is treating our priorities as the equivalent of that broken water heater. To get at this, I like to use language from one of the busiest people I ever interviewed. By busy, I mean she was running a small business with 12 people on the payroll, she had six children in her spare time. I was getting in touch with her to set up an interview on how she "had it all"...that phrase. I remember it was a Thursday morning, and she was not available to speak with me. Of course, right? But the reason she was unavailable to speak with me is that she was out for a hike, because it was a beautiful spring morning, and she wanted to go for a hike. So of course this makes me even more intrigued, and when I finally do catch up with her, she explains it like this. She says, "Listen Laura, everything I do, every minute I spend, is my choice. "And rather than say, "I don't have time to do x, y or z, "she'd say,"I don't do x, y or z because it's not a priority." "I don't have time, "often means "It's not a priority. "If you think about it, that's really more accurate language. I could tell you I don't have time to dust to dust my blinds, but that's not true. If you offered to pay me $100,000 to dust my blinds, I would get to it pretty quickly. Since that is not going to happen, I can acknowledge this is not a matter of lacking time, it's that I don't want to do it. Using this language reminds us that time is a choice. And granted, there may be horrible consequences for making different choices, I will give you that. But we are smart people, and certainly over the long run, we have the power to fill our lives with the things that deserve to be there. So how do we do that? How do we treat our priorities as the equivalent of that broken water heater? Well ,first we need to figure out what they are. I want to give you two strategies for thinking about this. The first, on the professional side: I'm sure many people coming up to the end of the year are giving or getting annual performance reviews. You look back over your successes over the year, your "opportunities for growth. And this serves its purpose, but I find it's more effective to do this looking forward. So I want you to pretend it's the end of next year. You're giving yourself a performance review (绩效评估) ,and it has been an absolutely amazing year for you professionally. Write next year's review: What 3-5 things would make it a great year for you professionally. So you can write next year's performance review now. And you can do this for your personal life, too. I'm sure many of you, like me, come December, get cards that contain these folded up sheets of colored paper, on which written what is known as the family holiday letter. Bit of a wretched genre of literature, really, going on about how amazing everyone in the household is, or even more scintillating, how busy everyone in the household is. But these letters serve a purpose, which is that they tell your friends and family what you did in your personal life that mattered to you over the year. So this year's kind of done ,but I want you to pretend it's the end of next year, and it has been an absolutely amazing year for you and the people you care about. Write the family holiday letter: What three to five things did you do that made it so amazing? So you can write next year's family holiday letter now. Don't send it. Please, don't send it. But you can write it. And now, between the performance review and the family holiday letter, we have a list of six to ten goals we can work on in the next year. And now we need to break these down into doable steps. So maybe you want to write a family history. First, you can read some other family histories, get a sense for the style. Then maybe think about the questions you want to ask your relatives, set up appointments to interview them. Or maybe you want to run a 5K.So you need to find a race and sign up, figure out a training plan, and dig those shoes out of the back of the closet. And then...this is key...we treat our priorities as the equivalent of that broken water heater, by putting them into our schedules first. We do this by thinking through our weeks before we are in them, I find a really good time to do this is Friday afternoons. Friday afternoon is what an economist might call a "low opportunity cost" time. Most of us are not sitting there on Friday afternoons saying ,"I am excited to make progress toward my personal and professional priorities right now. "But we are willing to think about what those should be. So take a little bit of time Friday afternoon, make yourself a three-category priority list: career, relationships, self. Making a three-category list reminds us that there should be something in all three categories. Career, we think about; relationships, self...not so much. But anyway, just a short list, two to three items in each. Then look out over the whole of the next week, and see where you can plan them in. Where you plan them in is up to you. I know this is going to be more complicated for some people than others.
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举一反三
【单选题】地震发生时,不可以躲进下列哪一处?
A.
机床
B.
写字台
C.
厨房
D.
电梯
【单选题】Two men took the box off the plane. They _____ .
A.
took off it
B.
it took off
C.
took off
D.
took it off
【单选题】下图为小明发明的给鸡喂水自动装置,下列是同学们关于此装置的讨论,其中说法正确的是 [     ]
A.
瓶内灌水时必须灌满,否则瓶子上端有空气,水会迅速流出来
B.
大气压可以支持大约10米高的水柱,瓶子太短,无法实现自动喂水
C.
若外界大气压突然降低,容器中的水会被吸入瓶内,使瓶内的水面升高
D.
当瓶口露出水面时,瓶内的水会流出来,实现给鸡自动喂水
【判断题】()绿色客房是指无建筑、装修、噪声污染、室内环境符合人体健康要求、客服内所有物品、用具的材料及使用方法都符合环保要求的客服。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】给定Java代码如下,关于super的用法,以下描述正确的是( ) 。 class C extends B { public C() { super() ; } }
A.
用来调用类B 中定义的super() 方
B.
用来调用类C 中定义的super() 方法
C.
用来调用类B 的无参构造方法
D.
用来调用类B 中第一个出现的构造方法
【多选题】下面关于时空的讨论,正确的有?
A.
时间是一种观念,是测量物质运动长度及其关系的量度,最初来源于对周期性运动的物质的观测。
B.
空间是一种观念,是测量物质大小、方位等延展关系的量度。
C.
真空不存在。
D.
牛顿时空观,是绝对时空观,是错误的。
E.
莱布尼茨时空观,是相对时空观,是与爱因斯坦时空观一致的。
【多选题】给定 Java代码,如下: abstract class Shape{ abstract void draw() ; } 要创建 Shape类的子类Circle,以下代码正确的是( )
A.
class Circle extends Shape{ int draw() {} }
B.
abstract class Circle extends Shape{   }
C.
class Circle extends Shape{   void draw() ;}
D.
class Circle extends Shape{   void draw() {}  }
【单选题】给定Java代码如下,关于super的用法,以下描述正确的是( ) class C extends B { public C() { super() ; } }
A.
用来调用类B 中定义的super() 方法
B.
用来调用类C 中定义的super() 方法
C.
用来调用类B 的无参构造方法
D.
用来调用类B 中第一个出现的构造方法
【单选题】给定Java代码如下,关于super的用法,以下描述正确的是( )。 class C extends B { public C() { super(); }}
A.
用来调用类B中定义的super()方法
B.
用来调用类C中定义的super()方法
C.
用来调用类B的无参构造方法
D.
用来调用类B中的构造方法
【单选题】( )是马克思为代表解释文化现象,他们指出人们的观念随着人们的生活条件、人们社会关系、人们社会存在的改变而改变。
A.
物质生活条件论
B.
社会有机体论
C.
社会团结论
D.
社会整合论
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