HEADSPACE

My dad’s superpower is his ability to fall asleep the moment his head hits the pillow. I definitively know the moment he falls asleep because his snoring sounds like a chainsaw starting up…. a very old chainsaw that you never look after.

Anyhow… I recently asked him what his secret was (to sleeping not snoring) and he told me he has a routine to start and finish his workday. Each morning he arrives at his office and steps down through the recesses of his mind to his headspace he has compartmentalized for work. Here he has created his dream office. He sits in his dream office space for a while then switches on his computer and starts his workday. At the conclusion of his workday – he returns to his headspace where his dream office resides. He mentally closes the door on his office, effectively finishing his workday. He turns off his computer and makes a conscious effort to close and lock the door to his ‘real’ office. That night…with a clear head, undisturbed by thoughts of work – he sleeps like a baby….well – a baby that snores like a chainsaw.

As artists or really anyone that runs their own business knows…it can be difficult to separate your work life from your personal life. One bleeds into the other and with no clear start or end to your workday – you end up working too much. Which results in a breakdown of routine that snowballs into unhealthy sleep patterns, which affects your productivity, and in turn your business and entire lifestyle. If you work from home – making this separation is even harder.

I have always worked from home and I have always struggled with a healthy work/life balance. But this year, in an effort to work smart, increase my productivity and create a healthy work routine…I decided to do things differently. Which is why two weeks ago I moved into a co-working space with fellow Brooklyn Collective members; Spencer Lum and Priya Patel. I couldn’t have foreseen that this one change would create such a positive flow on affect to so many areas of my life.

  • Firstly…I wake up feeling refreshed because I didn’t bring work home. I didn’t have to because working at the studio increases my productivity ten fold. With fewer distractions, I am less likely to procrastinate and being surrounded by other kick ass photographers on a daily basis both inspires and motivates me.
  • I love going to the studio everyday. It’s my happy place. Feeling happy about my work environment encourages creativity and having a support network of colleagues on hand for advice and/or feedback promotes the birth of new ideas.
  • I feel like an adult….like I might actually be successful. My clients think so too. Meeting clients in the studio is such a positive experience. I open the door to the studio with pride and approach the meeting with confidence. I don’t have to spend the first ten minutes of the meeting confirming my legitimacy as an artist. The studio space tells the story.
  • I’m healthier. I pack my lunch and sit in the sun by the river to eat it. I am even considering buying a bike so I can ride to work!

For me – the studio space has helped me achieve the headspace I needed for a healthy work/life balance but I don’t necessarily think you need a physical space to do this. It might be as simple as creating a routine to start and end your day, compartmentalizing your work life and closing the door on your dream office space at the end of your workday.

I would love to hear the challenges other photographers face with achieving an optimal work/life balance and what steps have you taken to overcome them…

 

Kirra

Comments

comments

One Comment

  1. peter

    Artistic license does not apply to daughters when they are slagging off their fathers.
    There is no truth in her ramblings that I am a snorer, although it still mystifies me that I get complaints from neighbors. Must be some homeless guy living in my front garden. This snoring myth was perpetuated by my wife Pam and passed on to my daughter. How would my wife have known, she slept in another room, she said the snoring from the guy in the front garden was too loud.

Leave a Reply