USA TODAY US Edition

Always ‘on’: How you can disconnect from work

Experts say setting time limits, keeping home for family can be key ways to cope

- Laura Petrecca @LauraPetre­cca Contributi­ng: Kirk Spitzer and Maya Vidon

It’s a few weeks into the new year, but those resolution­s to spend more time with family, friends and the treadmill are likely being interrupte­d — even outright thwarted — by the daily work grind.

There are client crises to handle. Proposals that need last-minute updates. Requests to come into the office early, or on a day off. This is important stuff. Our paychecks depend on our performanc­e.

Most of us know that continuall­y logging excessive hours can be bad for our backs and brains, as well as strain relationsh­ips (especially when we type on our iPhones during family dinners). But it’s just one more email to send. Oh wait, it’s two, maybe three ... suddenly it’s a half-hour later.

It’s just so hard to break free when communicat­ion with bosses, co-workers and clients is a mere few feet away via that smartphone in a pocketbook, pants pocket or bedside table.

“Technology allows us to work anywhere, anytime,” notes Carol Olsby, a human relations consultant and a member of the Society for Human Resource Management’s global expertise panel, who says that even she at times is a workaholic.

“How do you turn it off when everything is coming to your phone? You’re in the Safeway gro- cery line and you’re answering emails. You are fully connected.”

We’re always on — checking emails before going to bed, once we wake up, en route to vacations and for some, during the middleof-the-night bathroom run. Nearly half of all U.S. workers check email after they leave work and 45% say they do work during non-business hours, according to a 2016 CareerBuil­der survey.

Technical advances provide employees with greater flexibilit­y, yet there’s also the expectatio­n that with increased access, workers will be more available, says Patrick Kulesa, director of employee research at human resources consulting firm Willis Towers Watson.

That constantly-connected expectatio­n comes at a time when work demands are already high.

“There is pressure globally — it’s not constraine­d by borders — certainly for multinatio­nal organizati­ons to deliver more with less and to be more productive,” Kulesa says.

It’s so difficult to escape the informatio­n onslaught that some countries have taken action to help employees maintain some sort of work-life balance.

France instituted a law Jan. 1 that requires firms with more than 50 employees to give its workers the right to disconnect during their off hours. The Japanese government, along with participat­ing business groups, will launch a campaign in February that encourages workers to leave work at 3 p.m. on the last Friday of each month, reports Bloomberg. The “Premium Friday” campaign comes after highprofil­e reports of “karoshi” — the Japanese term for death by overwork — including the suicide of a young woman who was working 100 hours or more of overtime in a single month.

Yet, most countries — and

“There is pressure globally ... to deliver more with less.” Patrick Kulesa, director of employee research, Willis Towers Watson

most companies, for that matter — aren’t putting in measures to reduce our workloads. It’s on us as individual­s to figure this out.

One way to survive, and even thrive, is to proactivel­y manage the expectatio­ns of others, says psychologi­st Mary Alvord.

That means communicat­ing clearly about our availabili­ty and coming up with strategies such as asking a colleague to cover our duties while we are on vacation. Such planning ahead can help to reduce stress. “Part of anxiety is feeling out of control,” Alvord says.

Also, keep in mind that there are some positives to our constantly connected world.

“Some people are overwhelme­d, but a lot of people like the flexibilit­y of it,” says Lee Rainie, director of Internet, science and technology research at the Pew Research Center.

For instance, if employees can do work at night, that can give them the ability to tackle some personal things during the work day.

“The work-home boundary is a lot more fluid than it used to be,” he says. “People are doing home things at work and work things at home. More than less are glad for it.”

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