Working Well: Saying no is hard, but setting boundaries can improve your
health
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[January 10, 2025]
By CATHY BUSSEWITZ
NEW YORK (AP) — When Justin Stewart started his career, he juggled
several jobs to make ends meet. He poured himself into his full-time
role as a news show production assistant from 3 a.m. until noon. Then he
rushed to the airport where he rented cars or to the big box stores
where he pulled retail shifts.
Sometimes, he slept in his car between jobs. Then he was hospitalized
for exhaustion and a staph infection.
“While people around me praised my hustle, I eventually paid the price,”
Stewart said. “The doctor looked at me and said, ‘I don’t know what
lifestyle you’re living, but you’re too young to be this stressed.
You’re going to have to quit something.'"
So Stewart, now 36, began setting boundaries. He gave up the side jobs,
deciding he could survive without extra income. If people from the news
show texted him after-hours, he let them know he was off-duty and where
else to call.
Setting boundaries at work, and in life, can be tricky. Many people find
it difficult to say no, especially to a manager. Some get a sense of
satisfaction from being needed or pleasing others.
But learning to turn down a request or invitation is essential for
protecting our physical and mental health, experts say. And as with any
new skill, drawing boundaries gets easier with practice.
Experts in well-being and organizational behavior, along with other
workers, shared strategies for setting limits.
Schedule aggressively
Adding tasks to your calendar may seem counterintuitive if scaling back
is the goal, but can provide more control over your time.
Bobby Dutton, the founder of event production company GBM6, uses a
technique he calls “aggressive calendering.” He schedules the task he’s
most likely to procrastinate on, such as handling contracts and
invoices, for every Monday at 2 p.m. To keep his calendar from becoming
overloaded, he also books time for recurring routine tasks like making
coffee, walking the dog and eating lunch.
Write a script
If you’re unaccustomed to saying no, you can write down what you’re
going to say beforehand and rehearse it. Stewart worked on letting
colleagues know when his assignment load began feeling too heavy with
phrases like “Hey, this is a lot for me" or "You gave me seven stories,
I think I can get four or five done.”
Cara Houser, a workplace engagement coach, says you don’t have to
explain yourself when declining a request. You can simply say you’re not
available at that time, followed by “Thanks for asking, and I hope to
have more capacity next time.”
If the recipient of your “no” tries to argue, you can respond, “I hear
you feel that way. But for me, this is what I’ve decided to do for that
day,” Houser said.
Entrepreneur Amber Krasinski grew up in a working-class environment
where saying no to a boss could mean losing a paycheck. As the founder
of marketing company IvyHill Strategies, Krasinski worries she'll lose
clients if she turns down a project. “Not yet” is her go-to phrase when
one more project is too much.
“That phrase has helped me through a lot of situations,” she said.
Know your limits
It can be tempting to agree immediately when we're asked to chip in. But
there may be times when we're better off demurring. When faced with a
new work request, take five minutes to assess your workload, energy
level and priorities before responding, suggests Israa Nasir, a
psychotherapist in New York.
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AP Illustration / Annie Ng
Nasir says a former boss frequently
texted work-related questions at 10 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays.
“I didn’t say, ‘Don’t text me,’” she recalled. “I said, ’Can we
check in on Fridays before the weekend? So everything that’s on your
mind, you can (tell me) and then I can plan my time accordingly.”
Pay attention to the activities and interactions
that leave you feeling drained or overwhelmed, Nasir said. Put those
kinds of events on a “No List." The list doesn't mean you decline
every time you're asked, but don't say yes right away, she advises.
Harness technology
Mobile devices make it easier to work from anywhere, and harder to
draw boundaries. But there are ways to adjust our devices so they're
less distracting.
After noticing that she checked email far too frequently on
weekends, Nasir starting moving the Gmail app from her iPhone’s
homepage to the second page from Friday night to Sunday night.
An email signature is another tool you can use to manage
expectations, by publishing working hours or upcoming vacation
schedules, said Candice Pokk, a senior consultant in organizational
effectiveness at Segal.
Pokk includes a “Well Being Notice” at the bottom of her emails
which reads, “Receiving this email outside normal working hours?
Managing a work-life balance is unique for everyone. I have sent
this email at a time that works for me. Please respond at a time
that works for you.”
Choose meetings wisely
With the popularity of online meeting software, it's easy for others
to overload your calendar with invitations. Accepting every one can
leave little time for other work.
Janine Pelosi, CEO of Oslo-based video technology company Neat,
thinks workers should be able to leave a meeting that's not relevant
to them, if it's an environment where that's accepted.
If you're unsure it's worthwhile to attend, you can request an
agenda in advance, or ask what is the desired outcome, she said.
Give a time frame
Publisher Lori Perkins, 65, was working 12 to 16 hours daily when a
cancer diagnosis halted her routine. During chemotherapy, she could
only muster up enough energy to put in four hours a day, and even
then felt like she was working “in a vat of molasses.”
After treatment, "I realized I was going to live, and then I said to
myself, ‘Do I want to continue doing this?’” Perkins said.
She now caps her work as owner of Riverdale Avenue Books at about 50
hours per week, and as a result can't review as many manuscripts.
Instead of sending rejection letters, she tells authors to come back
in three to six months when it's less hectic.
She practices saying “no” in her head and in her journal, where she
also chronicles what happened after she said it. She's gained time
to visit museums, friends and the theater.
“No changed my life,” Perkins said. “I am a different person than I
was before I really learned to embrace no."
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