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Transitioning from Work to Home: How to set your night up for success.

The Question

How do you transition from work to home each day? Do you have a particular routine you use to help you go from employer/employee to spouse mode?

The Problem

Like we discussed last post, the transition moment is either seamless or it's very rocky. If it's rocky, it might be because you're having trouble "shaking off" work as you enter into your home environment. The transition from work to home is rough for a lot of people. Maybe your job is very stressful, very labor intensive or very people driven. If you live alone, you may not think much about the transition from work to home, but I'd suggest that it's chiefly important for you to not blur the line between the two, and consider your home life entirely separate from your work life. If you have a spouse and/or family, walking in to a house full of people who need things from you can feel pretty overwhelming after a tough day at work! It's so important that everyone in the house is getting their needs met. It's possible. It just takes some honest reflection and a strategy.

The Plan

If you struggle with decompressing after a stressful work day, here are a few ideas:

  1. Pick a transition point. On your commute home, give yourself time to process the work day mentally, but at a certain landmark of your choosing, switch trains of thought and start thinking about home. Anything. Stuff on the agenda for the night. Things you like about your spouse and kids. Whatever. Just transition at a planned point so that you can be prepared when you walk in the door.

  2. Write down important things from work. Something you need to do tomorrow? Particularly frustrating conversation with your boss? Write it down. And leave it in your vehicle. You'll get it out of your system just enough to be able to turn your attention to other things.

  3. Ask for/Give space. Sometimes I distract our toddler so my husband can sneak in without being noticed and take a quick power nap in our bed. (When he comes out later: Surprise! Daddy's home already!) This way, he's a little more refreshed and ready to engage. Some people like to take a shower to help them transition from work mode to home mode. Others like to watch the news in relative peace and quiet. Whatever you need, figure it out and make it known.

    • This is particularly important if you're especially introverted or extroverted. You have needs for either connection or an intentional alone time. These are both legit needs and you shouldn't minimize them. This need has to be met in order for you to be able to give what your family needs. But, you shouldn't take all night for this need to be met. Do what you've gotta do to decompress the necessary amount, but then be available and present...physically and emotionally.

In conclusion, consider what you need to really be "off the clock."

If you live alone...don't blur the line between "work" and "home" just because you can and no one will complain about it. You'll burn out eventually and plus, it's just no fun. You owe it to yourself to maintain/create an identity separate from your work, and this transition point of your day goes a long way to support that part of who you are.

If you're married, don't let the transition home moment each day pass you by without considering how you're approaching it and how you can redeem it for better connection and relational satisfaction! It's an easy moment to enter into and make a big impact on your relationship. You can do this!

As always, I'd love to set up a time to discuss this issue or anything else for which you'd like to receive counseling support.

Spring Life Counseling LLC