4: Create Your Ideal Week

4: Create Your Ideal Week

Do you have too much going on? In all seriousness, can you fit everything that needs to be done on your calendar? If you feel like there are simply not enough hours in the day, this episode is for you.

More and more of what we are expected to do in academia is "shallow work": paper pushing, email, useless meetings. This means that we are finding less and less time for "deep work" (terms explained by Cal Newport in his book Deep Work): the thinking and creating that we were trained to do, the reasons many of us got into this profession in the first place.

The market is flooded and if you don't have time to write and publish or to bring in the big grant money,someone else is: someone who is willing to work nights and weekends, or who has home-care built in, or is turning themselves inside out to try and do it all.

I want you to see that the fact that you feel overworked and overwhelmed is not a reflection on your personal character. It's not your fault. You are part of a system that is set up this way. But what do we do about it?

On this episode we're talking about how to "find" time with a strategy called "my ideal week."

(If you're interested in more ways to make time to write, I've got a PDF list for you called 10 Ways to Make Time To Write. Grab it here.)

Guidelines for Creating Your Ideal Week Calendar

An ideal week calendar is a visualization of how you can make your work fit into your working hours. Here is how you do it.

  • Come up with basic categories for everything you do. Some examples are: teaching (class meeting times, course prep, grading); research (data collection, lab work, reading, writing); service (meeting times, work on service-related things); etc.

  • Map them onto your calendar. Assign each category a color, then map each one out onto your work week. Using a color-coded system will help with visualizing, and making adjustments later in the process.

  • Reminders and suggestions.
  1. Don't forget what I call "personal maintenance" time. Use this category for things like taking a walk, break times, and always taking time for lunch away from work.
  2. Be sure to block similar items together, and don't forget to include "tiger time" (see episode 2 for more information).
  3. Schedule activities that tend to run over against immovable tasks, like scheduled meetings or class time, to prevent using more time than needed.
  4. Consider waiting to check email until after lunch.

"One of the things that really derails us in terms of time management is checking email first thing in the morning." -Cathy Mazak

Reflect on Your Ideal Calendar

Once you have your ideal calendar laid out, with activities slotted into blocks, and everything you need to accomplish in place, it's time to reflect on what you've come up with.

  • Does what you have laid out accurately reflect your "load", whatever that may be according to your university contract? In other words, if you are supposed to be spending 50% of your time on teaching and 50% on research, does this calendar reflect that?

  • Does everything you need to do in a week fit into this calendar? If you are having to cram 50, 60, 70 hours into your work week to fit everything, something HAS to go. What will you cut? This is important to maintain a fulfilling career and avoid burnout.

  • How would it feel to actually live out this schedule?

Try Your Ideal Week Calendar

This exercise is designed to help you make time for writing and for yourself. It is meant to help you spot things that are bloating your schedule and wasting time. But you won't know for sure what works, and how to adjust it unless you actually give it a try.

"The reason that we try new things is because what we're currently doing is not working."

If you feel like what you are currently doing is not working in terms of your schedule and your time, then please, try it! Do the ideal week exercise, and value yourself enough to work through it and find a better experience for yourself.

"Let's make this academic life more centered, less stressed, and less overwhelming."

If you are in our Facebook Group and you decide to lay out your ideal calendar and give it a try, snap a pic, share it with us, and let us know what you've learned! If you'd like to join us, head here.

Connect with me:

Website

Facebook Group

Facebook Page

This episode was first published at cathymazak.com/episode4

Avsnitt(339)

304: Meeting Goals Mid Career - Featuring Dr. Filomena Garcia

304: Meeting Goals Mid Career - Featuring Dr. Filomena Garcia

Many early-career academics believe that once they secure tenure, the pressure eases, writing gets easier, and work magically fits into a reasonable workday. In this episode, I explain why that belief...

27 Jan 22min

303: Writing Through Career Pivots And Transitions - Featuring Dr. Lauren Woodard

303: Writing Through Career Pivots And Transitions - Featuring Dr. Lauren Woodard

What happens when your research agenda is disrupted by forces completely outside your control?  In this episode, I'm joined by Dr. Lauren Woodard, an assistant professor of anthropology in the Maxwell...

20 Jan 44min

302: The 3 Biggest Mistakes When Trying to Publish Your Backlog of Papers

302: The 3 Biggest Mistakes When Trying to Publish Your Backlog of Papers

Are you committed to making 2026 an academic writing year?  In this episode, I share information on the upcoming Navigate cohort, my 12-week writing and publishing program for academics who are ready ...

13 Jan 49min

301: Welcoming 2026 as a Writing Year

301: Welcoming 2026 as a Writing Year

What if 2026 wasn't the year you tried to do everything, but the year you finally did the thing that most aligns with your academic mission statement? In this episode, I'm officially inviting you to m...

6 Jan 29min

300: Powering Down 2025 And Welcoming 2026

300: Powering Down 2025 And Welcoming 2026

Today we're celebrating a milestone: Episode 300. Instead of doing a big party episode, I wanted to share a more grounded, honest reflection as we wrap up 2025, a year that has been one of the most pr...

16 Dec 202527min

299: Scaling Research Without Grants

299: Scaling Research Without Grants

2025 has been a year of funding uncertainty in academia, and I know many of you have been asking yourself how to keep your research moving forward when grant opportunities are unpredictable.  Today, I...

9 Dec 202519min

298: Confronting Feelings Of Shame, Fear, And Guilt About Writing

298: Confronting Feelings Of Shame, Fear, And Guilt About Writing

Guilt, shame, and fear around academic writing show up far more often than we admit. And for many academics, those emotions become so intertwined with our identity that even seeing the phrase "making ...

2 Dec 202528min

297: Cathy's Holiday Book Review

297: Cathy's Holiday Book Review

The holiday season is here, and what better way to celebrate than with some great books? In this special 2025 holiday book review episode, I'm sharing some of my favorite reads from the past year, plu...

25 Nov 202519min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

badfluence
framgangspodden
rss-jossan-nina
varvet
rss-borsens-finest
uppgang-och-fall
avanzapodden
bathina-en-podcast
fill-or-kill
svd-tech-brief
lastbilspodden
borsmorgon
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
rss-den-nya-ekonomin
dynastin
affarsvarlden
rikatillsammans-om-privatekonomi-rikedom-i-livet
market-makers
rss-borslunch