6098 comments
2357 subscribers
6263 on Twitter
Subscribe! Feed reader E-mail

Rethinking

There’s nothing like a commute to make me think existentially. ;) The 1.5 hour commute up to and 1.5 hour commute back from 3600 gave me plenty of things to ponder.

My first reaction was to resent the wasted time. I could’ve been on-site! I could’ve stayed home! I could’ve been eating clementine oranges like  popcorn instead of debating about whether to get oatmeal from the cafeteria! (The oatmeal _was_ good, though. First time to try it with almond flakes and dried apricots.)

It was tempting to blame other people for assumptions I had and decisions  I made, too. If only this, if only that.

And I confess, I didn’t make the most of my time at 3600, either. When  my teleconference finished and I confirmed that no one was going to be around all day, I decided to skip the afternoon rush and work from home instead. I didn’t feel comfortable pinging random strangers for a quick coffee/hot chocolate break, and I knew I’d feel better working from home (with healthy food within reach and the freedom to do jumping jacks during my hourly breaks) than working in a cubicle without a good view of sunlight.

Three hours. I kept myself busy. My DS Lite proved really handy as an MP3 player when I was walking and as a game machine when I was sitting down. I listened to executive summaries and book reviews of “Mastery”, “Success Built to Last”, “Citizen Marketers”, and “Go Put Your Strengths to Work”. I played Brain Age 2, getting my brain score down to 25 years. I even drew a little using DS Colors, which I’ve been using to sketchblog. It was not a waste of time, but I still had that nagging feeling that I could have used that time better.

Or could I?

Could I have done anything better at that moment, in that situation: during the commute? No, I don’t think so; I’m reasonably happy with what I did, given the circumstances.

If I didn’t have that commute, could I have used the time more wisely? Now there’s a more interesting question.

Could I have worked more? It was hard to tell today, because I let the stress affect me. Overall, I think my work hours would have been the same, although less stressed.

Could I have done something else to work towards my goals? Write a blog post, write part of my book, hem my pants? Would these alternate activities have been worth _not_ going? I can’t really say that, either. These are things I would like to do, but it wouldn’t be fair to say that I should have been writing instead of commuting, and then still take a break. Downtime is important. Gaps are important. Life needs room.

That seems to be a healthier way to look at it. Start from the assumption that commutes are downtime and that’s okay, then look at the glass as half-full. Maybe throw in a few visualization exercises to take advantage of time, too. Hmm… I’ll try that on my next commute.

As for the other point–not feeling like pinging random strangers–I’m going to try experimenting with being social at IBM. Hey, it worked in TorCamp, it can work at IBM. Of course, it helped that people at TorCamp events were there to network, but still, it’s worth a try. I can meet people and make friends. =)

Short URL: http://sachachua.com/blog/p/4517
  • http://learning-at-work.blogspot.com Clair

    Just chill, girl =) Relax when you can. Maybe long commutes help us rest a bit =)

  • http://sachachua.com Sacha Chua

    @Clair: Yup, getting the hang of that… =)

  • http://learning-at-work.blogspot.com Clair

    Glad to hear that =) Well, I am not a fan of long commutes myself but sometimes it’s a welcome thing because of the rest I could get sometimes. And it could help me catch up on my book readings too. ;) (I’m talking about non-work books! :D :D :D Fiction like The Cat Who or any other book!)

On This Day...

  • 2012: Tips for growing as a sketchnoter — New to sketchnoting? Aside from reading Mike Rohde’s The Sketchnote Handbook (see my sketchnote of it!) and Dan Roam’s Back [...]
  • 2011: Weekly review: Week ending December 16, 2011 — From last week’s plans Work [X] Follow up on possible next engagements – got next Drupal project lined up, [...]
  • 2010: Test-driven development and happiness — Me: Happiness is a test suite that passes. @philiph: Do you practice test-driven development for your [...]
  • 2009: Learning plan for 2010 — Here are my priorities for 2010: Share as much as I can at work and in life. I want to share [...]
  • 2008: Leavin’ well enough alone — So I’ve gotten my Linux partition mostly back into working order. I had run out of hard disk space on [...]
  • 2008: #hohoto conversations — I put “Sacha Chua, @sachac, livinganawesomelife.com” on my nametag because putting “Sacha Chua, @sachac, sachachua.com” felt a bit repetitive. It [...]
  • 2007: Rethinking II — It’s funny, but the On This Day widget on my personal blog tells me that precisely three years ago, I [...]
  • 2007: The Tick
  • 2004: Philippine OSS news: NCC eGov Center for Excellence — From JJ Disini: The NCC launched its eGov Center for Excellence on Monday. Maybe I’m wrong but I think this is a [...]
  • 2004: Linux advocacy: not just preaching to the choir — Graphical user interfaces have their advantages and disadvantages. While they present information in an easy-to-understand manner and make it easier for new [...]
  • 2004: The uses of darou: だろう — In writing, 本当のだろうか is preferred over 本当ですか. のでしょうか is the polite form. Other uses of darou 1. 推測 (guess, conjecture) だろう でしょう 2. 疑問 (question) のでしょうか のだろうか 3. 原因、理由の推測 のでしょう のだろう 4. [...]
  • 2004: Summarizing reading 8-2-1 — 若者の日本語力が低下していること。きちんとした言葉を使う機会が減れば減 るほど、言語能力は低下するという原因。国語という日本語を積極的に勉強し なければならないということ。 Tip: For summaries, end sentences with nouns like こと or 原因.
  • 2004: Kanji of the day — 1`Webブラウザから要求を受信すると、wwwサーバーはそれに対応する情報を送り返します。 Webブラウザからようきゅうをじゅしんすると、wwwサーバーはそれにたいおうするじょうほうをおくりかえします。 送り返します。| [It] sends [it] back. 情報を送り返します。| [It] sends back information. 対応する情報を送り返します。| [It] sends back the corresponding information. それに対応する情報を送り返します。| [It] sends back the information [...]
  • 2004: On the virtues of idleness — Read Quitting the Paint Factory and reflect a bit on the space we should create in our lives. =)
  • 2003: Revised sacha/perl-training/suck-data-in — (defun sacha/perl-training/suck-data-in () "Insert BBDB records for all the Perl trainees." (interactive) (goto-char (point-min)) (while (re-search-forward [...]
  • 2003: Elisp code to insert all — Data is of the form number|Name|e-mail|Expectations (defun sacha/perl-training/suck-data-in () "Insert BBDB records for all the Perl trainees." (interactive) (goto-char [...]
  • 2003: Extracting the trainees’ files and packaging them — Shell scripting to the rescue! # Zip their work up for DIR in *; do ( cd $DIR; zip perl-day1.zip * ); [...]
  • 2003: Extracting all the mail addresses from the programs — grep -ri 'mail' * -A 10 -B 10 | less This displays enough context information around the data so that I [...]
  • 2003: Project ideas — Rating system – they’ve got this already
  • 2003: Perl focus — - Reading source code, testing, adapting software to their own needs - 4 programmers
  • 2003: Stuff at [[../learn/perl/training/day1]] so far — Oh no, it’s 12:05 and I haven’t even started on Real Text Processing… Teaching.Perl

Get the highlights as a PDF!

Stories from my Twenties: Highlights from a Decade of Blogging

Free sample!