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April 25, 2003
Give the Gift of Time
To Yourself
What would you do with an extra 10 hours a week? That's a question many
of us may never need to answer, but would love the opportunity to figure
out. Ten hours to spend on absolutely anything. Make your list. Write
it down. Do possibilities abound?
Are you tightly scheduled and overworked, with much of your day at work,
getting ready to go to work, traveling to and from the office, and putting
in those extra hours to try and get one more thing finished before you
go home to eat? Is the evening gone before you know it, and then you sleep
(or not)? The National Sleep Foundation reports that "a third of
all Americans work more than FIFTY hours each week."
April marked the 70th anniversary of the 30-Hour Workweek Bill, a little
known event in U.S. History that would have made anything over 30 hours
per week overtime. Imagine the possibilities if 30 hours a week was the
standard by which we all lived.
Living in balance. Time to spend with family and friends. Time to read.
Time to plant seeds. Time to fold the clothes. Time to help children with
homework. Time for conversation with a friend. Time to simmer split pea
soup for dinner. Time to mix up a batch of granola or take a walk in the
woods. Time to volunteer.
TAKE BACK YOUR TIME DAY is a nationwide initiative* to challenge the
epidemic of overwork, over-scheduling and time famine that now threatens
our health, our families, our communities and our environment. Here are
some facts and figures from www.timeday.org:
- We're putting in longer hours on the job now than we did in
the 1950s, despite promises of a coming age of leisure before the year
2000.
- In fact, we're working more than medieval peasants did, and more
than do the citizens of any other industrial country.
- Mandatory overtime is at near record levels, in spite of a recession.
- On average, we work 350 hours per year - nearly nine full weeks
- longer than our peers in Western Europe do.
- Working Americans average a little over two weeks of vacation
per year, while Europeans average five to six weeks.
The national campaign to take back your time is looking for other like-minded
people interested in living balanced lives to help plan activities for
the first ever Take Back Your Time Day on Friday, October 24, 2003. The
idea is to hold hundreds of activities on that day "to initiate a
much-needed national conversation about work/life balance and how we can
reclaim it." Can't afford to work less? You need full-time hours
to qualify for health benefits? Organize an event in your community to
talk about these issues and look for solutions.
The date falls nine weeks before the end of the year, making the point
that we Americans now work nine weeks more each year than Western Europeans
do. And again from www.timeday.org:
- Overwork threatens our health. It leads to fatigue, accidents
and injuries. It reduces time for exercise and encourages consumption
of calorie-laden fast foods. Job stress and burnout costs our economy
more than $200 billion a year.
- Overwork threatens our marriages, families and relationships
as we find less time for each other, less time to care for our children
and elders, less time to just hang out.
- It weakens our communities. We have less time to know our neighbors,
supervise our young people, and volunteer.
- It reduces employment as fewer people are hired and then required
to work longer hours, or are hired for poor part-time jobs without benefits.
- It leaves many of us with little time to vote, much less be informed,
active citizens.
- It leaves us little time for ourselves, for self-development,
or for spiritual growth.
- It leads to growing neglect and abuse of pets.
- It even contributes to the destruction of our environment. Studies
show that lack of time encourages use of convenience and throwaway items
and reduces recycling.
Do you remember the first ever Earth Day? A friend of mine remembers
riding her bicycle to school wearing an army surplus gas mask. In high
school at the time, she still remembers how it felt to make a public statement
about the state of the environment, and wonders how the impact of her
simple act, joined together with many others across the nation, affected
people's awareness and the national conscience to protect the environment.
Imagine yourself being part of something equally significant, an historical
event that, according to Jerome Segal, author of Graceful Simplicity,
"could do for our overworked, over-scheduled, overstressed lives
what Earth Day did for the planet."
You too, can be part of planning how to take back your time. Contact
the official website for more information: www.timeday.org
Send your questions to MaryJane Butters, c/o MaryJanesFarm, 1000 Wild
Iris Lane, Moscow, Idaho, 83843. Questions may also be e-mailed to maryjane@maryjanesfarm.org.
Please include your name and daytime telephone number. For more information,
visit www.maryjanesfarm.org
- Commentary: Boys Who Crochet January
20, 2004
- Commentary: Wax, Wick, and Wavering Light
January 8, 2004
- Commentary: Gifts from the Home
December 10, 2003
- Commentary: Each Other December
3, 2003
- Commentary: Gather Up October
31, 2003
- Commentary: Rethinking Venison
September 19, 2003
- Commentary: Rethinking Salsa
September 5, 2003
- Ask MJ: squash harvest August
7, 2003
- Commentary: S'more Fun Around
a Campfire July 31, 2003
- Ask MJ: garlic scapes July
24, 2003
- Commentary: Garden Hoses July
18, 2003
- Ask MJ: make your own toothpaste,
drying flowers July 3, 2003
- Commentary: Sharpening and Caring
for Your Garden Tools June 26, 2003
- Commentary: Hard-to-Find Gardening
and Farming Tools June 19, 2003
- Commentary: Dried Food is Simplicity
Itself June 12, 2003
- Commentary: See You on the Front
Porch June 6, 2003
- Commentary: Simple Hanging Baskets
May 30, 2003
- Commentary: Apron Strings and
Purse Things May 23, 2003
- Commentary: Graduation May
16, 2003
- Commentary: Family-Friendly Travel
May 9, 2003
- Commentary: Take a Kid Camping
May 9, 2003
- Commentary: Gone Fishin' May
2, 2003
- Commentary: Give the Gift of Time
— To Yourself! April 25, 2003
- Ask MJ: natural easter egg dyes
April 18, 2003
- Commentary: Welcoming the Day
April 11, 2003
- Commentary: Nesting April
4, 2003
- Commentary: Sprouting Sprouts
March 28, 2003
- Commentary: Creating Photo Collages
March 21, 2003
- Commentary: Mothers March
14, 2003
- Ask MJ: potted bulbs March
7, 2003
- Commentary: Grow Your Own Winter
Greens February 28, 2003
- Commentary: Something About Buttercup
February 21, 2003
- Commentary: Heirloom and Antique
Seeds February 14, 2003
- Ask MJ: mild bathroom cleansers,
starting plants from seed February 7, 2003
- Commentary: The Art of the Egg
January 31, 2003
- Ask MJ: winter herb gardening,
stevia January 24, 2003
- Ask MJ: antique sewing machines,
fragrance free dish detergent, oils for baking January 17, 2003
- Commentary: Green Power January
10, 2003
- Commentary: Salad Spoon December
27, 2002
- Ask MJ: poinsettias December
20, 2002
- Ask MJ: whitening laundry, indoor
plants December 13, 2002
- Ask MJ: entertaining children
December 6, 2002
- Ask MJ: home canning November
28, 2002
- Commentary: Grow a Simple Holiday
Gift November 21, 2002
- Commentary: Take a Vacation at
Home November 14, 2002
- Ask MJ: eating out, furniture polish,
composting, sweaty feet November 7, 2002
- Ask MJ: eating organic, indoor
pollution October 31, 2003
- Ask MJ: cutting back on coffee,
Valentine's Day and flowers, non-toxic nail polish October 24, 2002
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