Sunday 23 May 2021

Review: Working Hard, Hardly Working by Grace Beverley

 


My rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Going into reading this book, I was apprehensive. I follow Grace Beverly on Instagram and so have seen her productivity posts and watched the YouTube videos of her working insane hours when she was at university. I mean, in my time at university I’ve been guilty of overworking myself, but I’m someone who can’t work well past 5pm so it was more “not give myself any rest days” rather than “working late into the night”. As well, I feel like this book came out at just the wrong time for me. I’m finishing up my degree and going into a job where I can’t implement these techniques. However, what I have applied to my last few weeks at uni has been really helpful.


One thing I initially wasn’t sure of was “micropassions”. Grace gave an example of mind-mapping and that couldn’t be further from what I like to do and seemed so work-orientated in a way that I couldn’t relate to that I was turned off by the whole idea. However, after speaking to my friend she said that she really likes having a job where she can count money and that’s something she’s enjoyed since she was a teenager. Suddenly my whole perspective on micropassions changed and whilst I haven’t figured out what mine are yet, it has given me a more positive attitude to finding out.


The one thing from this book that I’ve been able to implement with a lot of success has been calendar blocking. As my deadlines were handed in one by one I found myself with a lot less to do and therefore was subject to Parkinson’s Law - carrying out a task over an extended period rather than taking the amount of time the task actually needs. Here the suggestion of calendar blocking really helped me; I found myself less beholden to Parkinson’s Law and had more free time.


The goal setting aspects of this book I think will take me longer to implement and I need
to read back over those sections again. Being in education for the past 18 years or so I haven’t found the need to set goals because the next thing I have to do is put in front of me. As I begin a career it will be interesting to try to implement it.


The “hardly working” side of this book was a bit of a let-down. It felt like a lot of waffle and a lot of repeating itself, which was a shame because so much of the book talks about the dangers of “hustle culture” etc. but then it doesn’t address it as much in the second section of the book as I would have hoped. That is the main reason for my star rating dropping down.


Still, this was an interesting and useful read and a book I think I’ll be coming back to refresh the ideas in my mind and to make sure I implement things to improve myself.

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