I'm working from home today and it's probably just as well. My entire week has involved shortened sleep periods due to insomnia or (in the case of last night) staying up too late talking with friends. And while it's nothing compared to what new parents go through, adding 3-4 hours of sleep debt for a week running is really starting to wear on me. Headache, general crankiness. There's some sort of construction thing happening across the street, and I kinda want to take all their tools away from them and throw them in a volcano. As I'm in NC and volcanos are hard to come by locally, I will probably just complain to the cat about it.
And to y'all.
I don't even know how parents function. I am so bad without sleep.
I also have a horrible sleeping pattern. Monday I slept from midnight to six, Tuesday from 9 pm - 3 am, Wednesday from 11 pm - 1 am and 5 am - 7 am, and today I slept a normal 11 pm - 5 am. WHich probably means tomorrow I will be up at 2 or 3!!
That would kill me, Sophia.
I have done the look-back and next year's goals part of my review, now I have to do my development plan. I don't want to work on any areas next year! Fuuuuck.
I think it is genetic. My mom and my grandma also slept crazy weird hours.
I don't even know how parents function. I am so bad without sleep.
New parents use a very liberal definition of 'function'.
I have done the look-back and next year's goals part of my review, now I have to do my development plan. I don't want to work on any areas next year! Fuuuuck.
I don't suppose they'd react well to "Next year's goals: Get a great new job somewhere else," would they?
That would be amazing, though.
I wonder if there are some steps in mental preparation for a job search that you could parlay into development goals - deveoping networking mojo, polishing up some marketable skill that could make you more well-rounded as a candidate, something...