Time episode artwork

EPISODE · Nov 19, 2019 · 6 MIN

Time

from Rainbow Glo

My idea of success is not having to wake up to an alarm clock. In my twenties I worked in corporate America and I hated having to be awakened by an alarm clock. In those days, I was a true night owl and rarely made it to bed before midnight. So when six am rolled around the snooze button and I became intimately acquainted. I commuted by train from the suburbs to work in downtown Chicago for most of my corporate career and there were three train options that would get me to work on time, and about 80% of the time I barely made that third option. Many mornings I’d be running down the actual train tracks, which ran behind my studio apartment, trying to get to the station before the train arrived. Sometimes, I cut it so close that I could see the lights of the train coming towards me from the opposite direction. When the weekend rolled around and I could wake up whenever I wanted, it was bliss. My time was my own to do what I pleased. I loved the work I was doing, for the most part, I just couldn’t stand having to get up early in the morning. Over the course of the fifteen years that I worked a ‘day’ job I longed to be at a place in my life where I was in control of my own time. In 1998, I was pretty fed up with working my very good full-time job because for all of the 15 years that I work my day jobs, I was also pursuing a music career. Something had to give. So I quite impulsively decided I was relocating to Florida to live in the warmth of the sunshine state and leaving the cold windy city of Chicago behind me. I made this decision in December of 1998 and by May of 1999 I was living in Orlando. Because I hadn’t really planned on this move, I didn’t have much money saved so a month after moving to Orlando, I had to get a job. I did get a job, and this job was the beginning of my working a schedule that was more conducive to how my body naturally functioned. I didn’t have to be at work until 3pm for this job. OMG, this was fabulous and there was no need for an alarm clock! The sunshine became my alarm clock, because most mornings I awakened to sunshine streaming into my bedroom. Every morning I thought to myself, why hadn’t I moved to Florida years ago. I loved it! Now, because I run my own business I have full control of my schedule and I try not to do any work before 11 am. I leisurely wake up, have some coffee, do a bit of writing and spend an hour or so doing yoga and meditation. Then, I’m ready to face my day. For the 10 years I’ve lived in the UK, I’ve had the freedom to do what I want with my time. For me, this is success! But lately, I have noticed a bit of anxiety around time. Maybe it’s due to getting older that I feel this mad rush to get things done. There’s so much I still want to do and sometimes it feels like time has sped up. Birthdays seem to be rolling around faster. Don’t get me wrong, I am thankful for the birthdays. The anxiety around time, though, was something I knew I needed to get a handle on. I’d be working on a task and would feel knots in my stomach thinking about all the other tasks I needed to get to. Because of this, very little was actually getting done. And then the universe started sending me the answer. Take Your Time. This message was coming from everywhere … Take Your Time. Take ownership of your time. So I starting slowing down. I no longer multi-task. I work on one thing until it’s finished and then move on to the next, and if while doing that task I start thinking about something else I need to do, I add it to my to do list and then I get to it when I get to it. I’m taking more time with my songwriting. I am also saying ‘no’ a bit more … limiting my ‘yes’s’ to the things I really want to do. I like how Derek Sivers puts it, it should either be ‘hell yeah, or no.’ Another nugget I picked up from Derek is to ‘use the future.’ Not everything has to be done right now. Focus 100% on the (more)

My idea of success is not having to wake up to an alarm clock. In my twenties I worked in corporate America and I hated having to be awakened by an alarm clock. In those days, I was a true night owl and rarely made it to bed before midnight. So when six am rolled around the snooze button and I became intimately acquainted. I commuted by train from the suburbs to work in downtown Chicago for most of my corporate career and there were three train options that would get me to work on time, and about 80% of the time I barely made that third option. Many mornings I’d be running down the actual train tracks, which ran behind my studio apartment, trying to get to the station before the train arrived. Sometimes, I cut it so close that I could see the lights of the train coming towards me from the opposite direction. When the weekend rolled around and I could wake up whenever I wanted, it was bliss. My time was my own to do what I pleased. I loved the work I was doing, for the most part, I just couldn’t stand having to get up early in the morning. Over the course of the fifteen years that I worked a ‘day’ job I longed to be at a place in my life where I was in control of my own time. In 1998, I was pretty fed up with working my very good full-time job because for all of the 15 years that I work my day jobs, I was also pursuing a music career. Something had to give. So I quite impulsively decided I was relocating to Florida to live in the warmth of the sunshine state and leaving the cold windy city of Chicago behind me. I made this decision in December of 1998 and by May of 1999 I was living in Orlando. Because I hadn’t really planned on this move, I didn’t have much money saved so a month after moving to Orlando, I had to get a job. I did get a job, and this job was the beginning of my working a schedule that was more conducive to how my body naturally functioned. I didn’t have to be at work until 3pm for this job. OMG, this was fabulous and there was no need for an alarm clock! The sunshine became my alarm clock, because most mornings I awakened to sunshine streaming into my bedroom. Every morning I thought to myself, why hadn’t I moved to Florida years ago. I loved it! Now, because I run my own business I have full control of my schedule and I try not to do any work before 11 am. I leisurely wake up, have some coffee, do a bit of writing and spend an hour or so doing yoga and meditation. Then, I’m ready to face my day. For the 10 years I’ve lived in the UK, I’ve had the freedom to do what I want with my time. For me, this is success! But lately, I have noticed a bit of anxiety around time. Maybe it’s due to getting older that I feel this mad rush to get things done. There’s so much I still want to do and sometimes it feels like time has sped up. Birthdays seem to be rolling around faster. Don’t get me wrong, I am thankful for the birthdays. The anxiety around time, though, was something I knew I needed to get a handle on. I’d be working on a task and would feel knots in my stomach thinking about all the other tasks I needed to get to. Because of this, very little was actually getting done. And then the universe started sending me the answer. Take Your Time. This message was coming from everywhere … Take Your Time. Take ownership of your time. So I starting slowing down. I no longer multi-task. I work on one thing until it’s finished and then move on to the next, and if while doing that task I start thinking about something else I need to do, I add it to my to do list and then I get to it when I get to it. I’m taking more time with my songwriting. I am also saying ‘no’ a bit more … limiting my ‘yes’s’ to the things I really want to do. I like how Derek Sivers puts it, it should either be ‘hell yeah, or no.’ Another nugget I picked up from Derek is to ‘use the future.’ Not everything has to be done right now. Focus 100% on the (more)

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Above the Law - Thinking Like a Lawyer Legal Talk Network Thinking Like A Lawyer is a podcast featuring Above the Law's Joe Patrice, Kathryn Rubino, and Chris Williams. Each episode, the hosts will take a topic experienced and enjoyed by regular people, and shine it through the prism of a legal framework. This will either reveal an awesome rainbow of thought, or a disorienting kaleidoscope of issues. Either way, it should be fun. Explicit LeVar Burton Reads LeVar Burton and Stitcher The best short fiction, handpicked by the best voice in podcasting and presented in 3D immersive audio. In every episode, host LeVar Burton (Roots, Reading Rainbow, Star Trek) invites you to take a break from your daily life, and dive into a great story. LeVar’s narration blends with gorgeous soundscapes to bring stories by Stephen King, Toni Morrison, Nnedi Okorafor, Kurt Vonnegut, Ken Liu and more to life. So, if you’re ready, let’s take a deep breath...Our immersive audio is best with headphones! If you'd prefer to listen without immersive audio, visit levarburtonpodcast.com/mono. Explicit Qweird Nicole Yve Better than high tea with the Queen, it's a podcast featuring Nicole, a boat nerd, and Yvie, a cottage-core WINO (witch in name only), telling stories about our queer lives & talking to our cool, queer friends about their glittery adventures riding the rainbow - who could ask for anything more?CW/TW: Conversations are off the cuff, explicit, and loaded with adult content. Explicit Glo In The Dark Tracy G. If you’re craving a well-being hangout where both your light AND your shadows are cool to pull up, Glo In The Dark is for you. Hosted by Sway In The Morning’s very own Tracy G. along with her confidante of 20 years, Guerdley Cajus, the two make space for enlightening, hilarious and uncomfortable reflections from their own lives as well as eye-opening interviews. Tracy and Guerdley speak to those who are curious about the deeper messages within everyday and not so everyday life… while also not taking this sh*t too seriously.  Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Explicit

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This episode was published on November 19, 2019.

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My idea of success is not having to wake up to an alarm clock. In my twenties I worked in corporate America and I hated having to be awakened by an alarm clock. In those days, I was a true night owl and rarely made it to bed before midnight. So when...

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