Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Do what you can to restore the weekend

- Paramita Ghosh

GIVE YOURSELF A FEW HOURS AT THE START OF A LEAN DAY TO UNWIND, LOG OUT OF WORK

So far, life has had a law. Weekdays were followed by weekends. You worked through the week and then played, whether this meant going trekking, grabbing your camera to get some shots, or heading to a café.

The absence of a weekend, and any weekend-like activity, can add to the monotony and stress of lockdown, so here are some ways in which you can restore a sense of downtime and change of pace to Saturdays and Sundays.

A TWEAKED ROUTINE

Working from home means that weekends probably involve some work too, so you may not be able to switch off completely. If that is the case, give yourself a few hours at the beginning of the day to unwind and log out of work mode.

“On weekdays, I do almost the same thing as I would in the office — make my calls, do my planning and scheduling, and I do them in the same order every day,” says Rajeev Jalnapurka­r, CEO of Ramoji Film City in Hyderabad. “I maintain a bit of that routine on weekends, but tweak one or two details and add one big fun or learning activity.

Also, on weekends, I don’t watch the news obsessivel­y every hour. I log on for my online course in financial crisis management instead, and I compete with my wife and, with the help of Youtube, my good friend, on who is better at oil-free cooking.”

SLOW LIVING

“Time is at a standstill and utterly confusing,” says singer and voice trainer Rimi Basu Sinha from Mumbai. For her, weekdays used to mean dubbing at the studio or teaching. Weekends were activity-oriented.

Now she knows, she says, what it means to be completely still. She has slowed down accordingl­y, focused her attention on projects she couldn’t make the time for.

“Last weekend, while rummaging through my cupboard, I came upon stacks of books my grandfathe­r had left my mother. Books of magic, recipes, puzzles…. There are also stacks of albums and memories of our time in Nairobi in 2005. All that had been forgotten, I am able to revive some of it now.” On weekends, she is “touching” all the relationsh­ips she had left loose for the past 40 years. “Mum is no more but my aunts are alive. I am telephonin­g them one by one. Earlier it just used to be ‘howare-you-and-we-are-fine-too’ conversati­ons. Now we are really talking”. It’s a practice she says she will not be giving up post-lockdown.

DROP OUT, SIGN OFF

End the week on a good note and make the feeling last, says Delhi businesswo­man Suhrita Basak. Basak is learning Kathak through Skype. “My walks are over; there is no question of going out now. Kathak is the compensati­on,” she says.

Ambalika C Das, a tech entreprene­ur from Kolkata, says the advantage of staying in for the weekend is that you can get some real downtime – time when you can drop out, sign off and be in your “own zone”. “I had no time earlier to catch up with or bingewatch a favourite show,” she says. She now does this on weekends. So Sundays stay Sundays.

 ??  ?? Singer and voice trainer Rimi Basu Sinha is allocating time on the n weekends to go through her late grandfathe­r’s stack of books and albums, and it’s led to her reconnecti­ng with her aunts as well.
Singer and voice trainer Rimi Basu Sinha is allocating time on the n weekends to go through her late grandfathe­r’s stack of books and albums, and it’s led to her reconnecti­ng with her aunts as well.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India