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Why My Summer Vacation Was a Total Failure – and Why it Really Wasn’t

This month, I officially celebrate my first 6 months as a freelancer. Surprisingly enough, one of the reasons I quit my day job and went the self-employed route was because I wanted to work less, not more. I don’t want to get rich sacrificing my personal life. I just want to achieve a balance.

So this year, I’ve done the unthinkable: I gave myself a full month of vacation time. August is a (really) slow month in Greece anyway, since temperatures have the bad habit of raising to and beyond 30C (~90F). Surely not an appropriate environment for slaving in front of a text editor.

The moment my vacation started, I thought I was in heaven – one full month without commitments, apart from a 9-day trip to UK? You’re kidding me, right? I felt like a schoolgirl again.

However, these idyllic days now belong to the past. As any good thing (insert horrible cliché here), they’re history. And I find myself struggling to get back to work, starting one of my favourite months of the year.

So what have I learnt from this one-month sabbatical? I keep reminding myself these three things:

  • When you’re busy making plans, life is busy passing by. Stop making plans. Never stop doing things and having fun.
  • There’s never enough procrastination. You’ll never bore yourself surfing the shiny ‘nets. It’s in your hands to put an end to your ever-worsening ADHD.
  • Don’t leave any “someday/maybe” plans for your vacation. Vacation time should strictly be time off. Your body won’t let you work anyway.

I was planning to finish my portfolio page this month. Liven up my blog. Work on various personal projects. Improve my web design knowledge and practice.

Instead, what have I done? Nothing really. Read about 9 fiction books, walked around most of London, got a slight tan, went to a kickass beach party and visited relatives & family. Also started a tiny vidcast. And that’s it.

Will I try this prolonged vacation again? Most probably, yes. Maybe even more. But I’ll start my future vacation thinking about what I won’t do and not about what I’ll do.

That’s always a more realistic point of view, I think.

4 comments on this post

  1. Apostolos #1

    I think this quote shows the true meaning:

    When you’re busy making plans, life is busy passing by. Stop making plans. Never stop doing things and having fun.

    And as Jake Burton said once, “Have as much fun as possible!”

  2. Petros Amiridis #2

    Based on the advice in this video:

    http://www.ted.com/talks/derek_sivers_keep_your_goals_to_yourself.html

    I think that even promising something to ourselves can be tricky.

  3. harryplusk #3

    Good to hear from u again (I thought u joined project 52, didn’t u?)
    Well, I never plan my vacations – I always leave the others to do it for me…:)
    Procrastination never ends. Indeed.
    Nice thoughts.

    Harry.

  4. Sugar #4

    @Petros

    Really interesting aspect. It’s something that happened to me more than once and it’s a habit I want to kick out of my life.

    @harryplusk

    The p52 project is a prime example of what Petros referred to in his post. I think I should just zip it and save myself the guilt of not following this posting scheme. Thanks for your comment :)

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