Posts tagged sheltering with kids
How To Remain Professional From Your Home Office

Suddenly Doing Business From Home!!!!

Suddenly Doing Business From Home!!!!

How To Remain Professional From Your Home Office

We are experiencing a very different season right now because of the Corona Corid 19 Virus. Everyone around the world is isolating within their homes.  Children and animals are suddenly under foot, while parents try to work from home. I hope I can make a few helpful suggestions to help you get through this very difficult time.

You need to find a place to create your workspace. Suggestions for setting up a home office on the fly includes looking for the quietest place in your home. Some quick ideas might include emptying a closet, laundry room, storage room, garage or basement or even using an extra bathroom as an impromptu office! 

This is only temporary, so be creative. 

If it’s impossible to avoid the shouts of children, barking dogs, shrieking birds, flushing toilets and what-have-you; and you absolutely must make phone calls, consider going outside and away from these noises. Avoiding phone calls and using texts and emails is the first solution.

However, remote online meetings can be a different story.  While muting a microphone can help if you are not hosting a meeting, things are different if you are actually trying to host it. As the host, it might be helpful to schedule the meeting at the same time that kids are doing their online school or schedule the kids’ school time around your meeting. 

Spouses, older siblings and others in the household can help you, too. You might even be able to send “the noise” outside! But always remember to train your children to stay 6 feet away from others when they go outside. You might send them outside with some sort of adult supervision, if possible. Keep everyone safe!

As crazy as this seems, those of us who are used to being homebased in our businesses all recommend that you get up and get dressed just as if you were headed to the office.  This will help you psychologically prepare yourself for your workday.

Overall, this is a very difficult time for everyone, so I think most people will be tolerant if they do happen to hear some strange workplace noises.

For further suggestions please take a look at my recently released book See Dick and Jane Start a Homebased Business, now available on Amazon.com. https://read.amazon.com/kp/embed?asin=B085XQSP2K&preview=newtab&linkCode=kpe&ref_=cm_sw_r_kb_dp_tILHEbDKJCYED I hope you find it helpful.

If you just have questions, please visit my website at https://www.jeannegormick.com and click on the Free Consultation button.  I would be happy to help you get through this in any way I can. I raised 3 kids in a homebased office environment, so I might be able to help.

Everyone stay safe!

Survival Techniques for Kids While Sheltering in Place
 
Fighting kids.jpg

If you are a parent who NEVER planned to homeschool or be a stay at home parent, everything has changed with Covid 19 (the Corona Virus.)  But you know that already!

I have seen co-workers scrambling to get childcare or trying to figure out how to effectively work from home.

I wanted to help everyone in some small way as we are facing a new world. 

So, I consulted my grandkids for their ideas. I did some research and this is what I came up with. I sincerely hope you find it helpful…

For the littles, I’d start with this fun recipe for flub, AKA slime! My kids made it way back in preschool.          

  1. Put cornstarch into mixing bowl.

  2. Begin adding water slowly.

  3. Optional: Mix in glitter for a colorful craft.

  4. Mix with hands until the mixture is smooth.

  5. Continue adding water until you have achieved your desired consistency.

  6. Store in a plastic bag or airtight container.

Another great idea, which my kids always loved doing, was building forts in the living room.  Give them all the sheets and blankets you can find and enjoy their creativity. You can give them a deck of cards or age appropriate board games.  Older kids can read to younger siblings inside the forts with flashlights.

Some other ideas for them:  Play Simon Says or I Spy; write letters to grandparents or other relatives; play dress-up;  make a sock puppet;  make-up new rules to an existing game or make up their own;  bake something; help make meals; or have fun making dessert for dinner. My mother would occasionally make strawberry shortcake for Sunday supper.

If cabin fever can’t be avoided, it’s OK to go outside. So take a hike; make sandcastles at the beach (6 feet away from one another); take a road trip with food inside the car; lay down on the ground and watch the clouds; walk the neighborhood; watch birds; have a backyard picnic; grow something;  ride a bike (without getting too close to friends); blow bubbles; paint rocks; wash cars; have a water gun fight; or as a twist, offer to walk a neighbor’s dog!    

Whatever you end up doing, take advantage of this opportunity to get to know your kids better and just enjoy each other.

To avoid boredom in your teens, there are so many things that you might even have fun doing too. Once they have finished their online homework, then go ahead and give them unlimited access to their electronic devices.  I’m the first one to emphasize discipline, but these are extraordinary times!

My granddaughter suggested Snap Chat which is great for making funny faces to share. Tik Tok allows them to make videos. If they are very social Houseparty Face Time works for sharing with up to 8 friends. They might already know about these, but if not you can become their hero!

My grandsons love to play Fortnight and my son gets involved in it too.  Though it can be addictive, we have to make allowances, since we really have no idea how long this season will last. Though we are all going to need to recover from being extra close to our families, I’d like to think that this will bring our families closer together too.

I hope I’ve helped at least some of you that everyone stays healthy with safe sanitary practices and this difficult season is over soon.