Oswald Letter

Going on vacation? Try your best to disconnect from work

Close up telephone on background of computer at the beachby Dan Oswald

Remember the old Eveready battery commercial with Robert Conrad in a muscle shirt playing the tough guy? He had an Eveready battery sitting on his shoulder while he muttered the line, “I dare you to knock this off.” I’m not sure why he was daring anyone to knock the battery off his shoulder or what that really had to do with selling batteries, but I do remember the commercial nearly 40 years later.

A better question might be, why am I reminiscing about a battery commercial of which I don’t understand the point? And I really don’t have an answer for how it relates to anything, other than that I was thinking about the importance of recharging your battery, and the old commercial came to me.

Perhaps I’m being self-indulgent in extolling the virtues of time away from the office. You see, as I write this, I’m on a flight home after a week on a Caribbean island. So I’ll let you be the judge of whether or not I’ve just allowed my guilt to get to me and I’m going to waste your time trying to justify my week away from the office.

I’m not sure if we’re every really away from the office. I, of course, traveled to paradise with my cell phone and computer in tow. I checked e-mail multiple times each day. My wife would use the word “constantly,” but I think that’s a reach even if I must admit how darn easy it is to take a peek at my phone as the e-mail comes in. And I had a couple of scheduled calls during the trip. So I was away from the office but not really completely disconnected.

If you are indeed old enough to remember the Eveready commercial, then you might also recall the days when you went on vacation and the only way to stay in touch with the office was to call from your hotel room. There were no cell phones. We had no e-mail. If you needed an update, you had to call in to get it. It made it a bit easier to disconnect from work—a blessing and a curse.

While on our vacation, my wife claimed that I am incapable of completely disconnecting from work—not for a full week but just two days. Challenge accepted! Next trip I’m going to prove I can indeed shut it all off for at least 48 hours. It can’t be that hard. And yes, I understand that my wife knows how to get exactly what she wants. All she has to do is say that I can’t do something and I’m out to prove her wrong. If I succeed in doing so, she gets what she was looking for in the first place.

I must say that after a week away, I’m ready to be back in the office. But it’s good for me to get away and spend some time thinking about something other than work. In our super-connected world, it’s easy to be hooked to work for the majority of our waking hours. So to step back from the daily grind gives one some perspective. You get the opportunity to look at the big picture. It’s too easy to get caught up in the details that make up our daily work instead of focusing on the greater vision for where we want to go both personally and professionally. A week away from the office can help you do just that.

Some people see never taking vacation as a badge of honor. Maybe it makes them feel important. They’re just too vital to the organization to be away. Others want to tell you that even when they’re on vacation, they really can’t stop working. Maybe they’re afraid they’ll be replaced. Maybe they’re afraid others will discover that they can get along without them. But it does make you wonder—why go on vacation if you’re only going to work? The purpose of a vacation is to take time away from work to enjoy yourself!

The truth is that a real vacation can allow you to come back reenergized and revitalized. It can help you regain your focus and attack things with a renewed energy. I think we sometimes forget the toll the daily grind of work can have on us. It slowly wears us down until we’re in a rut. A good vacation can help you regain that much-needed perspective. It can allow you to be a better employee. But it’s up to you to give it a chance. You must get away. You must disconnect. You must be willing to put work behind you for some length of time. Then let me know how it works for you. And I’ll let you know if and when I prove my wife wrong!

3 thoughts on “Going on vacation? Try your best to disconnect from work”

  1. The best trip my husband and I ever took was on an international (Italian) cruise line because he couldn’t use his cell phone OR his email and there was no TV except the ship’s channel that told us what we were going to do that day. There was a small daily news sheet that was international news and very cryptic. It took a few days for him to completely unwind, but I could see it. I could see him become the guy I married little by little. And suddenly we were young again and romantic and fun. We were sad to take the plane ride home. And we slowly tensed back up and returned to our busy, chaotic lives. But, it was good for us – and it will be good for you, too!

  2. I totally believe in disconnecting when you go on vacation. My vacation time is very important and sacred to me. I have a very intense and stressful job and I need to be able to disconnect in order to recharge my batteries. I make vacations sacred for the people that report to me. I also took a cruise and was able to disconnect completely. It was refreshing.

  3. For me, I find that the vacation enhances my desire to stay away from work. What does that say about the job or me? Am I blindly staying in a job that I can’t stand? Vacations encourage me to be creative, to feel like I can do something to enjoy my life. But then I come back to my job only to suffer the result of my absence….additional work, a back log of things that piled up. I am now paying for my audacity to dream of a different work life. So, in the end, for me vacations force me to examine how I live my life and then I suffer for not accepting the evidence that I may be in the wrong place at the wrong time.

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