festive season

It’s tempting to see the next little while as a space free from work, a space that gives you time to work. Well, of course you can do this if you want to, if you need to. For people who are part time doctoral researchers, sometimes the late December period is one of the few times you can get a day – or days – uninterrupted time at the desk. For people who have heavy teaching loads, sometimes the late December period is one of the few times you can get a day – or days – uninterrupted time at the desk. And for people working on other people’s projects, sometimes the late December period is one of the few times you can get a day – or days – uninterrupted time at the desk to do your own work.

Of course if you have children or family commitments, then there is no time to work. The trick is to not feel guilty or anxious that you are not working. This is easier said than done. I have no real commitments other than the commitment I made to myself to do less. But I’ve just had two days not working and I feel that I have done nothing nada zip zilch and I should have. Of course I have responded to emails, read a bit, checked the latest issues of a few journals and made a few notes. But this is nothing, nada zip zilch, right? Wrong.

It really is OK not to work sometimes. Well that’s what I try to tell myself. And so as a first step, and this is something I don’t do every year, I’m taking a bit of time off from the blog. I will be back on January 9. Of course I do hope in this “time off” to make some headway with other writing. I was just composing something about AI and journals in my mind this morning, and I do need to write it down before I forget…. and before I go away leaving my laptop behind.

I do hope that you all have a happy and healthy festive season, and that you too can find some down time. But if, like me, you still have to do a bit, that’s OK too. Just dont make it all day everyday. And I’ll try not to too.

About pat thomson

Pat Thomson is Professor of Education in the School of Education, The University of Nottingham, UK
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3 Responses to festive season

  1. Ritienne Gauci says:

    All the very best for the season. I enjoy your blog writings and somehow, when they get dropped in my inbox, they always resonate to my mood and spirit with such a perfect timing. Thank you.

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  2. Heather Dyer says:

    Wise words! We need an incubation period in order to allow our unconscious to process and synthesize the data we input, too. It’s how we get perspective and make new connections. Enjoy detaching for a while and thank you for all the work you do here, I draw on your blog posts all the time and recommend your blog to countless students ♥️

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  3. Ciaran Sugrue says:

    Good plan Pat– leaving the laptop behind– is key!
    Sentiments of the season to you and yours and best wishes for ‘blogging’ and other work when it resumes ….
    Ciaran

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