Recently, my brother and my niece conversed on Facebook about their “Thursday Feeling”. Apparently, many people experience a lift, a “Whew, I’ve almost made it!” feeling on Thursday as they look ahead to the weekend. I’m not on board yet with their “Thursday Feeling”. Improving our weekends is a work-in-progress, so I asked my readers to share thoughts on weekends.
Based on your responses, we would ideally spend our weekends sleeping in, not cleaning the house, accomplishing home projects, playing outside, doing homework (either ours or helping our kids with theirs), shopping, watching movies, relaxing and eating good food and ice cream. Ideally.
Last weekend was just right. Dinner out on Friday night with family, then an event at church. Saturday morning, all 5 of us participated in a 5K around our neighborhood, raising money for a local cancer organization. Then we spent time with my young niece, knocked out an organizing project, took naps and watched movies. Sunday started with family traditions, then Mass, brunch, and more relaxing. It was lovely.
In reality, weekends can be hectic and choppy. Personally, I start out with Cub Scouts on Friday. We have such a great time, but I am typically in charge of some planning and running our meetings, so when most people are winding down on a Friday, I’m revving up. Occasionally, I take Saturday clients because that is the only time some of them are available. Then we, like many of my readers, have multiple sporting or creative events, shuttling the kids here and there, fitting in house cleaning and home projects. Sundays always start with family and Mass, but may end up filled with work or projects or more commitments.
So how can we tweak our weekends? Where can we find that Thursday feeling?
- Align expectations. Trouble occurs when I anticipate a lazy weekend, and my husband plans a family day of yard work. My teenagers want to sleep until noon, I want bedrooms cleaned by 10 am. If you share your life with others, make sure to align your expectations with theirs.
- Communicate. A friend shared her family’s weekend strategy with me. She and her husband have a “meeting” on Saturday morning over coffee to discuss their weekend plans and expectations. They write down the scheduled events, the need-to-dos and also the hope-to-dos. She says “It feels good to have a list that we work on TOGETHER”, everybody gets at least a few things accomplished and her family feels better about their weekends.
- Don’t schedule too much. Try to leave some “white space”, as my friend Jan would call it, and choose to relax how you would like. Be selective when signing up for activities and accepting invitations.
- Shop during the week or on-line. I avoid the mall like the plague every day, but especially on the weekends. Shop during the week when the stores are less crowded. You can also automate your shopping. I shop on-line with Melaleuca. I love the household products, but mostly I love that they ship to my house monthly. I use Reliv as my nutritional supplement. I place my order quarterly and it arrives on my doorstep. I use Amazon.com for gifts and harder-to-find items. Less time at actual stores means more time for me and my family, and that is worth any money spent on shipping.
- Stick with routines. Schedule at least a few things. A mother of 4 young sons admitted that she prefers the structure of weekdays. Everyone seems happier during the week. Unstructured time is when the kids get rowdy, and sometimes into trouble. Stick with bedtimes and meal times, and I mean all of us, not just the kids!
- Find your weekend somewhere else. Because my weekends tend to be busy and not terribly relaxing, I have worked to find “weekend” time (relaxing and rejuvenating time) during the week. Every other month or so, I might schedule a massage, or catch a chick flick at the theatre on a weekday (none of the fellows in my house would want to go with me anyway!).
So, what will you try this week to make your weekend better? How will you promote that “Thursday Feeling”? Slow down and enjoy!