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Here’s How to Keep Work From Taking Over Your Personal Life

Working from home can be amazing (can you say “zero commutes?”). But when your home is also your office, separating your work life and your personal life can be a challenge. And without that separation, it can be easy for work to start spreading throughout your home and invading the rest of your life, making it hard to disengage and spend time on other things that really matter (like your family, friends, hobbies, and life).


I have been working (like most of us in Dubai) from home for almost 2 months, and while I wouldn’t change it for the world, finding the balance between getting work done and devoting a healthy amount of time and energy to my personal life has been tough. In the battle between work and home life, there have been many, many times when work has emerged victorious.


But I’ve put in a lot of effort to find a better work-at-home/live-at-home balance, and today I’m happy to report that while separating the two things can still be challenging, it’s certainly not impossible!

Why Separating Your Work Life and Home Life Is So Important

First things first—before we talk about how to keep your work life from infringing on your personal life when you work from home, let’s talk about why, exactly, that’s so important.

It Helps You Avoid Burnout

People can’t work 24/7. They need to have other things going on in their life. An always-working attitude can cause a variety of negative outcomes, including sleep issues, relationship problems, and burnout.

Taking time away from work can give your mind and body the time you need to rest, recover, and give the other areas of your life (like your sleep) the attention they deserve—and when you get back to work, you’ll have renewed energy to get things done.


It Lets You Unwind

Your home is supposed to be a place to relax—but for people who work from home, that can be a challenge.


We have evolved to pay close attention to the surroundings that we’re in—and that gives us cues about how we’re supposed to act. So if everywhere and everything in your house reminds you of work, you’re going to feel like you need to work all the time and you’re not going to be able to get the rest and relaxation you need to feel your best. For example, working in bed might feel comfortable, but if you start to associate your bed with your work, it will be harder for your brain to relax and go to sleep when it’s time for lights out.


Creating a clear sense of separation between work life and home life, both physically and psychologically, can make it easier for you to shut down and relax at the end of the workday.


It’s Good for the People in Your Life

If you’re unattached or live alone, the person who’s going to be impacted most by your work-life balance is you. If you have a family, things get a little more complicated.


You need to be able to shut off and give the people closest to you the time and attention they deserve; otherwise, your work can have a seriously negative impact on your relationships. A lot of people who work from home...are constantly checking their phone [and working]. That is going to make the partner [and family] feel a lot less listened to and a lot less valued.


Tips to Keep Your Work From Messing With Your Personal Life

Clearly, keeping your work life from infringing on your personal life is a must if you want to feel happy, healthy, and balanced. But how, exactly, do you do that? Here are a few tips from people who’ve made it work.


1. Work Parallel Schedules

When you work from home—and do so around the clock—it can feel like you and your family are ships passing in the night. The best way to combat that? Keeping similar schedules.


My wife is at the office and I work from home (yes, you heard it right !). That gives me 8 hours to do my thing. I need to be able to stop my work when she gets home so that we can catch up with each other and spend time together with our children.


If you live with a partner or children, it’s important to spend some dedicated time with them rather than always splitting your attention between family and work obligations. Scheduling parallel hours (for example, cranking out work while your kids are at school or during the same hours your spouse or significant other is at their job) will allow you to get things done but still have time to connect with your family members when they get home.


This kind of alignment shows your spouse [or family members] that you care about them. and are making it a priority to have time together without distractions. Just keep in mind that working parallel schedules only works if you focus on work when it’s work time and is ready and willing to shut down when it’s over.

2. Set a Firm Stopping Point

It can be easy to lose track of time when you’re working from home. And when you finally take a breather and look at the clock, somehow hours have passed—and you’ve worked far longer than you intended. It’s so easy to tell yourself “just five more minutes” or “just one more email.” But working crazy hours can throw your body out of whack.


Your body is used to operating on a schedule. Kids get up at the same time, they go to school at the same time, and this builds these rhythms and habits—and it’s very easy to know what you’re supposed to be doing and when you’re supposed to be doing it. Even as adults, we need that for a sense of consistency—because otherwise it just takes too long to figure out where we are and what we’re supposed to be doing. Setting a firm stopping point every day—and sticking to it—can help you keep your work in check (and keep it from infringing on the things you want and need to get done after work).


Katharine Bolin, owner, and digital marketing director has set a firm stopping point for herself at 5 PM. If she feels tempted to work into the evening hours, she reminds herself that her personal life actually benefits her job in the long run. "I need to have a life outside of work because that’s where inspiration comes from, and that’s what will ultimately keep me doing good work in my work life,” says Katherine


3. Have a Trigger to End the Work Day (and Start Personal Time)

Triggers (or cues) can be a powerful way to form new habits. Having a routine that you do every day when you finish work will send a signal to your body and brain that work is officially over—and it’s time to move on and enjoy your personal time.


At the end of the day, I make a to-do list for tomorrow before shutting down my computer. For me, it’s the virtual equivalent to the separation that a commute home gives.

What you do as a routine to trigger the end of work time and the start of personal time is up to you. My end-of-day routine is to run to my kids.


What you do is less important than doing it every day. The routine establishes a habit that ‘after I do this, I’m going to relax.’ And so it creates some separation between your work self and your personal self. And you need this in order to, again, fully relax [and] get your mind on other things.


4. Shut the Office Door

Ever heard the saying “out of sight, out of mind?” Well, that also applies to your workspace.

[One] of the tricks I use to separate my personal from professional life while I work from home is to shut my office door during weekends “The Office Is Closed!”

If you use a dedicated room as your home office, step away at the end of the day and leave all your work gear, like your laptop and work phone, behind. In other words, literally and figuratively shut the door on work so that you can pursue personal projects, family time, or just good, old-fashioned relaxing without feeling the pull of the office.


If you don’t have an enclosed workspace, no worries! You can create some physical separation with a screen or a well-placed bookshelf. And if that’s not an option either, just cleaning up your ongoing work can help you avoid the pull of your desk. Many people I know, leave their work out in plain sight, making it harder to disconnect. Clearing off your desk and putting your work out of view (for example, putting your laptop and any loose papers in a desk drawer) can help you create a visual and psychological sense of separation—even if you can’t physically close off your workspace from the rest of your home.


5. Schedule Screen-Free Time

One of my biggest challenges in creating separation between my work and home life is the constant screen time. If I’m on (or even near!) my laptop, or phone, I have to fight the urge to check my email—even if I’m supposed to be off duty and enjoying downtime.


This bad habit can be particularly annoying for my wife; no one wants to have a one-sided conversation with their partner while they mindlessly scroll through their Gmail app.


That’s why we’ve made screen-free time a non-negotiable in my house. Having a set time when phones, laptops, tablets, and TV screens are a no-go allows me to fully disconnect from my work and digital life—and fully engage with my real life. When my wife now gets home from the office, we both make sure to put our phones away and enjoy some screen-free time.

When you work from home, it’s so easy to be turned into work 24/7. But remember, your home is your home first—and your office second. And if you want to have the work-life balance you crave (and deserve!), you need to treat it that way.

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