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Vacations are a MUST for the Self Employed
By Karyn Greenstreet |
copyright © 2006, by Karyn Greenstreet. All
rights reserved. I've just returned
from a 20-day vacation to Yosemite, Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks.
It's impossible to describe the sheer terror of finally
deciding to take more than a week's vacation. Would my business crumble?
Would I miss logging on each morning to get my email? Would my clients
remember me when I returned?? Would I miss a new business opportunity while
I was gone?
It all started rather simply: three different
opportunities for speaking engagements came up in California, and so close
to one another that it seemed silly NOT to go to California and do
presentations. My husband casually suggested, "Why don't we both go, then
take some time for a vacation while we're out there?" It seemed reasonable
enough.
In the past, I'd take a week-long vacation a few times a
year, and my business had survived. But 20 days away from my office? It
took a bit of getting used to.
But let me tell you a secret: starting the very first day,
I never once had a interest in finding an internet café and checking my
email. Not once did I feel like I had to pick up phone messages and return
phone calls. It was shocking that I could so easily leave it all behind. It
was heaven!
Vacations are mandatory for self-employed people. When
you do your annual budgeting for your business, schedule in enough revenue
so that you can afford the cost of the vacations as well as the cost of not
earning money for the weeks you're away.
Why? Because we all need a break from our businesses, from
the high-energy involvement, from the stress, from the stuck places. You
need time to pay attention to yourself, to those you love, and to do the
other things you enjoy. You need a place to clear your head and step away
from the everyday busy-ness of your business.
After 20 days away, I'm refreshed. While hiking in
Yosemite, I made some major strategy decisions about the direction of my
business for the next five years, without even really thinking about my
business consciously. I allowed my sub-conscious to process all the
questions and decisions I had to make about my business, then allowed the
answers to slowly bubble to the surface while I walked, sat, talked, and
took photos of lovely nature scenes.
Now that I’m back in my office, I feel a rush of energy,
and a great clarity of thinking. I'm also keeping in touch with the slow,
calm, peaceful feelings I felt each day I was away, and am bringing them
back into my daily business life.
So, when is your next vacation??
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Karyn Greenstreet is a Self Employment expert and small business coach. She
shares tips, techniques and strategies with self-employed people to boost
clarity and focus, create sustainable motivation, and increase sales and
profits.
Visit her website at
www.PassionForBusiness.com
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