Why you need to stop talking about work at 5pm

If your work day ends at 5pm, all conversations about work end at 5pm, too. I’m not joking. I was very skeptical about this one. I used to think that talking about my day at home was the thing that kept me sane and grounded. I was wrong. Routinely processing my work day at home was actually making me more stressed—and I was losing money! 

You see, I began to see the time I had been spending talking—and even thinking about work—as unpaid work. I was paid to work from 9-5. Why would I continue working after 5? When consultants work with a company, a billable hour can be when they are in the shower and have an epiphany about how to market a new product. I’m not a consultant, I don’t set my own hours, and I do not need to be spending time processing work stuff in the shower. When I began to understand that time as unpaid work, I was motivated to stop. Who likes losing money?

This new habit has actually impacted how I think and what I talk about in my home. I have reclaimed my home—no more processing that frustrating conversation with my cousin while I prepare dinner, or working through how I’m going to start a difficult conversation at work while I do laundry. Your home and your time are sacred. It’s time you start treating them as such.

How do you leave work at work? Tell us about it below in the comments.

How to keep the focus of an interview on the candidate

The best way to start a relationship with your new staff member