1 00:00:03,440 --> 00:00:06,720 Speaker 1: Welcome to Before Breakfast, a production of I Heart Radio. 2 00:00:09,560 --> 00:00:14,160 Speaker 1: Good Morning. This is Laura, Welcome to the Before Breakfast podcast. 3 00:00:14,800 --> 00:00:18,840 Speaker 1: Today's tip is about borrowing a time management strategy from 4 00:00:18,840 --> 00:00:22,880 Speaker 1: President Theodore Roosevelt. Block out your schedule for the day 5 00:00:23,400 --> 00:00:27,320 Speaker 1: and alternate periods of focused work with completely different sorts 6 00:00:27,320 --> 00:00:31,280 Speaker 1: of activities that advance you towards your personal goals. If 7 00:00:31,280 --> 00:00:33,839 Speaker 1: you do this, you might wind up as the kind 8 00:00:33,840 --> 00:00:36,600 Speaker 1: of person who can run a country while writing a 9 00:00:36,600 --> 00:00:40,360 Speaker 1: book on naval warfare in your spare time, which yes, 10 00:00:40,920 --> 00:00:45,080 Speaker 1: Roosevelt did. I'm grateful to host Aaron McCarthy of the 11 00:00:45,159 --> 00:00:49,280 Speaker 1: History Versus podcast for sending an examples of Roosevelt's schedule. 12 00:00:50,320 --> 00:00:53,240 Speaker 1: Rather than work from a to do list, Roosevelt would 13 00:00:53,240 --> 00:00:56,520 Speaker 1: map out his days. This was a habit he developed young. 14 00:00:57,200 --> 00:01:00,320 Speaker 1: For instance, as a student at Harvard, he would have 15 00:01:00,400 --> 00:01:04,520 Speaker 1: breakfast at eight, study till ten, eleven to twelve, do 16 00:01:04,680 --> 00:01:10,240 Speaker 1: Latin recitation, then boxing at the gym, lunch, studying and 17 00:01:10,400 --> 00:01:15,520 Speaker 1: recitation until four, watching a ballgame, dinner, studying for an hour, 18 00:01:15,959 --> 00:01:18,560 Speaker 1: and then at half past ten reading by the fire. 19 00:01:19,800 --> 00:01:23,160 Speaker 1: One day on the campaign trail, he followed the following schedule. 20 00:01:23,959 --> 00:01:30,080 Speaker 1: Seven am breakfast, seven thirty am a speech, eight am 21 00:01:30,120 --> 00:01:35,040 Speaker 1: reading a historical work, nine am a speech, ten am 22 00:01:35,120 --> 00:01:41,360 Speaker 1: dictating letters, eleven am discussing Montana minds, am a speech, 23 00:01:41,959 --> 00:01:49,160 Speaker 1: twelve pm reading an ornithological work, PM a speech, one PM, lunch, 24 00:01:50,200 --> 00:01:54,960 Speaker 1: PM another speech, to thirty pm reading Scottish novelist Sir 25 00:01:55,000 --> 00:01:59,160 Speaker 1: Walter Scott, and so on. Now, with so much to do, 26 00:01:59,320 --> 00:02:02,160 Speaker 1: I mean, he gave eight speeches that day, it might 27 00:02:02,200 --> 00:02:05,080 Speaker 1: feel strange to stop in the middle to read a 28 00:02:05,120 --> 00:02:09,240 Speaker 1: Walter Scott novel. But by focusing intently on whatever he 29 00:02:09,280 --> 00:02:12,280 Speaker 1: was doing in the moment, and consciously building and breaks 30 00:02:12,320 --> 00:02:17,160 Speaker 1: focused on his passions, Roosevelt was able to read, take courses, 31 00:02:17,400 --> 00:02:21,160 Speaker 1: and exercise something less busy people often claimed to have 32 00:02:21,200 --> 00:02:24,440 Speaker 1: no time to do. Now, to be sure, a rigid 33 00:02:24,480 --> 00:02:28,600 Speaker 1: schedule can be tough when stuff goes wrong. If Roosevelt 34 00:02:28,639 --> 00:02:31,440 Speaker 1: was zooming from place to place but his train got delayed, 35 00:02:31,800 --> 00:02:34,880 Speaker 1: this could throw off the whole day. This is something 36 00:02:34,919 --> 00:02:39,120 Speaker 1: that another great figure in American history, Benjamin Franklin, discovered. 37 00:02:39,880 --> 00:02:43,480 Speaker 1: Anyone who's read his autobiography will recall the disciplined schedule 38 00:02:43,560 --> 00:02:46,400 Speaker 1: Franklin developed to help him as he ran his business. 39 00:02:46,720 --> 00:02:50,360 Speaker 1: And embarked on his ambitious project of achieving moral perfection 40 00:02:51,320 --> 00:02:54,120 Speaker 1: alas he soon realized that the schedule didn't always work. 41 00:02:54,600 --> 00:02:57,320 Speaker 1: People would come see him about doing business together, and 42 00:02:57,520 --> 00:03:00,560 Speaker 1: as a businessman, he wanted to have those meetings. But 43 00:03:00,639 --> 00:03:03,720 Speaker 1: oddly enough, these people did not always show up at 44 00:03:03,760 --> 00:03:07,600 Speaker 1: the exact moment when this was most convenient. So it 45 00:03:07,680 --> 00:03:11,440 Speaker 1: goes I'd probably leave more space than Roosevelt did to 46 00:03:11,560 --> 00:03:15,760 Speaker 1: deal with the unexpected, but it's hard to argue with success. 47 00:03:15,960 --> 00:03:18,480 Speaker 1: For those of us with more normal lives, we might 48 00:03:18,520 --> 00:03:22,639 Speaker 1: intentionally schedule in reading breaks during work, making it through 49 00:03:22,680 --> 00:03:26,320 Speaker 1: ten pages and fifteen minutes or so, rather than losing 50 00:03:26,320 --> 00:03:30,280 Speaker 1: this time to unfocused email checks. We might build in 51 00:03:30,360 --> 00:03:32,880 Speaker 1: space to go for a walk with a colleague, and 52 00:03:32,919 --> 00:03:35,440 Speaker 1: then maybe twenty minutes later in the day to practice 53 00:03:35,480 --> 00:03:39,280 Speaker 1: a foreign language. It's not that twenty minutes is so much, 54 00:03:39,840 --> 00:03:42,920 Speaker 1: but by consistently building in these bits of time for 55 00:03:43,040 --> 00:03:46,920 Speaker 1: other passions, we make them part of our lives, even 56 00:03:46,920 --> 00:03:48,880 Speaker 1: as we get a lot done in our main jobs too. 57 00:03:49,800 --> 00:03:52,880 Speaker 1: So how will you block out your daily schedule and 58 00:03:52,920 --> 00:03:55,680 Speaker 1: be sure to check out the History Versus podcast in 59 00:03:55,720 --> 00:03:59,880 Speaker 1: the meantime? This is Laura. Thanks for listening and here 60 00:04:00,080 --> 00:04:09,440 Speaker 1: to making the most of our time. 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