• Todd Bonzalez
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    5 months ago

    It surely gets better if you can make the necessary changes to your life to improve this.

    I never hear anyone talk like this who doesn’t live in the suburbs with a huge commute. I live in a city and can get to work in 15 minutes without a car.

    My schedule is:

    • 6:00am: Wake up, shower, eat breakfast, get dressed.
    • 6:45am: Leave for work.
    • 7:00am: Arrive at work.
    • 12:00pm: Lunch hour.
    • 4:00pm: Leave work.
    • 4:15pm: Arrive home and unwind.
    • 5:00pm: Workout.
    • 5:30pm: Prepare Dinner.
    • 6:15pm: Eat Dinner.
    • 6:45: Clean up kitchen and other parts of home.
    • 7:00pm: Movies, Video Games, Social Time, Sex Time.
    • 10:00pm: Go to bed

    That gives me a full 6 hours between finishing work and going to bed. If I choose an easy dinner, I hardly have to do anything less than fun after work, and I work in a cool part of town so I don’t actually have to go commute anywhere. I can be drinking at a bar within 5 minutes of clocking out, and I don’t have to drive home. Any other errands I make in a week are within walking distance of my home or work.

    Before I moved, my schedule was:

    • 5:45am: Wake up, shower, eat breakfast, get dressed.
    • 6:30am: Leave for work.
    • 8:00am: Arrive at work.
    • 12:00pm: Lunch hour.
    • 5:00pm: Leave work.
    • 6:30pm: Arrive home and unwind.
    • 7:00pm: Prepare Dinner.
    • 7:45pm: Eat Dinner.
    • 8:15pm: Clean up kitchen and other parts of home.
    • 8:30pm: Movies, Video Games, Social Time, Sex Time.
    • 9:45pm: Go to bed

    So that gave me an entire 3.25 hours after getting home, giving me no time to fit a workout in without giving up other leisure activities. This doesn’t even factor in that everywhere else I needed to run errands was a 15-30 minute drive away.

    • SwampYankee@mander.xyz
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      5 months ago

      I’ve had some pretty long commutes in the past because my work location changes every few years. I enjoy the work, though, so that helps, but I’ve still been feeling the OP lately. I’m in my late 30s and I don’t have kids and “fun” doesn’t really do it for me anymore. More and more I need to feel like I’m doing something worthwhile instead of aimless hedonism. I’ll figure it out, though, it’s just time to make some, as you say, necessary changes again.

      • Todd Bonzalez
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        5 months ago

        Making sure you have time is important. My schedule breakdown isn’t really the blueprint of my life. I belong to social groups, and I volunteer. I have hobbies and projects that I work on.

        If you don’t have enough unstructured time, you’ll never have the opportunity to build structure around it.