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Breathing Space: Living and Working at a Comfortable Pace in a Sped-Up Society (Paperback)

by Jeff Davidson (Author) "Remember how slowly the days passed when you were a child?..." (more)
Key Phrases: thy desk, managing the beforehand, more breathing space, Operation Clean Sweep, United States, New York
4.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (11 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Product Description
The breakthrough book for a time-pressed generation. Major features in USA Today, The Washington Post, Boston Herald, Chicago Tribune, and 75 other newspapers, plus Executive Female, USAir, Office Systems 98, Leaders, and Mens Health. Explains why the information age is not here yet; for now, most people are drowning in the over-information era. If you face too much paper, too much to read, or simply too much to do, this book will change your life. Get in control of your space, and control of your time and life will follow.

About the Author
Jeff Davidson is the work/life balance expert for a time-pressed generation. He helps career professionals overcome the relentless burden of information and communication overload. As a speaker, author, and columnist, Jeff Davidson has attracted clients such as America Online, NationsBank, Swissotel, IBM, American Express, Westinghouse, and more than 500 other leading organizations and associations. The body of work that he has assembled for his clients has earned him the Certified Management Consultant (CMC) designation from the Institutes of Management Consultants. His career as an author includes more than 3,450 articles and 36 books and 16 revised editions. Several of Jeff's books have been on the curriculum at George Washington University, Duke University, and the University of Connecticut, and have been translated into Japanese, Chinese, Turkish, Russian, Thai, Korean, German, Indonesian, Malay, French, Polish, Czech, Spanish, Portuguese, Arabic, Finnish, Dutch, Hebrew, and Italian. Companies who have retained Jeff as a consultant or speaker report impressive results. His consulting and speaking career has taken Jeff to 6 countries and 45 states (he stands ready to speak in Washington State, Oklahoma, and Utah as well as Alabama and Mississippi.) --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 209 pages
  • Publisher: BookSurge; 3rd edition (March 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0942361326
  • ISBN-13: 978-0942361322
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,036,509 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best book I use, February 24, 1999
By Anthony P. Mayo "Tony Mayo" (Virginia near D.C., USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I use a lot of books in the executive training I offer, some of them well-known bestsellers like Flow, but only one do I advise my clients to read: Breathing Space. Jeff Davidson has filled each page of Breathing Space with insight, practicality, and specific advice. To get your hands back on the controls of your modern life, no book is better.

Life in the today's world is busy, full, and rife with distractions. Satisfaction can easily slip away without special efforts to create an environment and habits which support our own goals and priorities. Fail to do so and you life will -- as Jeff Davidson amply demonstrates -- be thoroughly colonized by advertisers, entertainers, and co-workers. It has often been said, and is even more true today, that if you are not working your plan you are working someone else's plan. Breathing Space is the most succinct and useable approach I have seen to get back on your own plan. I have used his methods myself and with many clients. They not only work but keep working.

I call my variation of the organizing techniques "Clutter Buster." I noticed that before I organized my workspace, it gradually got less usable until I was moved to clean-up. My cleaning blitzes never quite got the space up to snuff, however, and each succeeding cleaning frenzy had poorer results than the last, for a picture over time like the "Before" graph below. I was spending more time "getting organized" and less time feeling organized. After an extensive and thoughtful re-design of the workspace based on Davidson's principles, I noticed that my area stayed more workable longer plus (1) the messy phases were less horrible, (2) my office was easier to re-organize, and (3) I spent much more time enjoying the peaks of organization. Bottom line: more productivity and greater satisfaction.

My home office was something of a disaster before I thoroughly organized it with the help of a consultant and this book. Not only did it look great afterward, but it stayed that way permanently. The considerable time and expense invested in that clean-up has been more than repaid. I have since applied the techniques to my garage, briefcase, car, and other parts of my life.

Getting Breathing Space can give you your life back and even create space for the life you always wanted.

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Read this book & see how much more you can accomplish in a day & how much more you can enjoy it!, February 12, 2007
Breathing Space: Living and Working at a Comfortable Pace in a Sped-Up Society
by Jeff Davidson

During the early nineties when I was embarking on my departure from the corporate world & entering the Corridor to pursue my entrepreneurial interests, one book caught my personal attention. At that time, I was told that "information doubled once every eighteen months". Alvin Toffler, John Naisbitt, & Richard Saul Wurman were already riding high on the information anxiety phenomenon, even though each of them has his own perspectives.

The book I am referring to is 'Breathing Space'. I am gratified to note that this book is still available. Although some stuff may be dated as it was written during the pre-internet era, a lot of the strategies & tools advocated by the author are still applicable in today's context.

First, the author defined 'breathing space' beautifully as: "You know it when you have it. It is the feeling of having time & space, of being in control, or content or relaxed. It is the room to be, to explore or to do nothing."

Let me outline here the major parts of his work:

1. The root causes of the pressure you feel;
2. Hand tools;
3. Power tools;
4. Cerebral tools;
5. Metaphysical tools;

Back in the early nineties, the book fueled me with a lot of valuable fresh insights, which empowered me to live & work at a comfortable relaxed pace in a 24-hour society:

- information only becomes knowledge when it's applied;
- choose to acquire knowledge that supports or interests you;
- about 80% of papers retained in office environments are never used;
- periodically, the sweetest choice is choosing from what you already have, choosing to actually have what you've already chosen;
- whenever you catch yourself making a low-level decision, consider: Does this really make a difference? Get in the habit of making only a few decisions a day - the ones that count;
- consider the value of any product, service or plan as two fold: (1) the intended benefit & (2) the ease with which you can understand, receive & enjoy those benefits. If it doesn't, don't buy it;
- Rules of Thumb: any item that saves you one hour per week for a minimum of one year & costs US$1,000 or less is an excellent buy; never mind if you purchased the latest or fastest model; there will always be later & faster models;
- any activity consuming 30 minutes of your day consumes two solid years of your life;
- to get to know someone better, ask him what his life priorities are;
- if you don't know what you have & you can't find it, it is of no use to you;
- just because it is interesting or expensive doesn't mean you have to keep it;
- being neat & being organised are not the same thing;
- a powerful way to gain breathing space, perpetually, is by seeking completions;
- preserve your weekends for recreational activites. You're worth it!;
- if you're serious about having more breathing space, give up fast food forever!
- you can increase the likelihood of experiencing time warp effect by removing yourself from the time measured environment - by hiding the clock;
- one hour of uncluttered thought can yield more benefits than days of common desk work;
- jump starting often enables you to capture your first & sometimes best thoughts;
- use the day units as a convenient measure for charting progress in pursuit of your goals;
- living in the moment does not mean living for the moment or living to get to the next moment. It means total, unconditional acknowledgement that what is now, is your life; that now is the only moment there is;
- the relentless quest to move on to what's next keeps you from fully enjoying what's here;
- longing more strongly for what you no longer have, rather than reveling in what you do have, is a guarantee that you will miss the present & all the magic it holds. Revel in what you have;
- how you elect to feel is always your choice. the act of choosing is a simple but powerful technique that will further aid you in attaining breathing space;
- when people make decisions based on instinct, they end up happier than those who make decisions based on careful analysis;
- choosing to feel at home frees you to experience the present moment, wit its surrrounding scenery, to the fullest;
- when you are off course, re-direct your energies. Ask: "What do I want right now?"
- go for a walk if you are stymied;
- most decisions you could make are of little consequence. Not choosing can be restful!
- some people remain poor is that they accommodate poverty...as difficult as it is for them to live in abject poverty, they are not willing to accept the difficulty of making a better life for themselves (according to Prof Kenneth Galbraith);
- get ruthless, drop what doesn't support you;
- constantly read your priorities & goals list;
- clear all your files of deadwood;
- count twice; look for all the ways to re-apply the work you have already done;

Even up to today, the insights from the book still work for me! Many thanks, Jeff, for a wonderful exposition!

To conclude my review, let me say this: Read this book & see how much more you can accomplish in a day & how much more you can enjoy it!
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Everyone Needs Some, November 11, 2001
By Richard Corbett (Plainsboro, NJ USA) - See all my reviews
Stress, busyness, information - it's all around you and it seems there's so much of it, and it's so insistent, and it's so loud, an it's so invasive.

And in reading Jeff Davidson's latest resource for leaders, managers, and just about everyone, it's clear that the pressure is here to stay, at work and at home - and it will get worse. There is no returning to an earlier, simpler, unhurried time.

So....we need some strategies, some tools, and some...breathing space.

Fortunately, Jeff Davidson makes good on his title. Breathing Space starts with a clear and compelling analysis of why we feel so pressured. The reader is then focused on very positive, healthy strategies to deal with a world where 565,000 books are published each year, 95 million printers are spewing paper from at least 95 million computers, and the typical executive receives 225 pieces of unsolicited mail each month.

In 22 succinct, comortably paced chapters, Breathing Space offers practical and innovative strategies for clearing up the clutter, breaking through procrastination, organizing your workspace, managing your reading, and choosing your priorities wisely - among other work and personal challenges.

Breathing Space attacks paper clutter with a vengeance, as in - get rid of it! Eighty percent of the paper we save will never be needed. Most importantly, the reader learns how to conrol paper at the intake point, so that it never piles up in the first place.

Davidson's insights are especially powerful on the widespread perceived need to keep up with information overload from print, media, and electronics. He draws our attention to how much we are exposed to information that does not really support us but which, day after day, robs us of breathing space. His sensible strategies leave the reader feeling that this too, can be handled, and that we need not waste energy in guilty responses to an information overload which we can never posssibly keep up with.

Chapters are broken up with short messages labeled "Fresh Air", that put our need for breathing space in perspective. One Fresh Air message captures a theme that radiates throughout the book:
"Telltale signs of being too busy: If you're too busy to enjoy life, you're too busy; If you're too busy to stay calm, you're too busy; If you're too busy to stay in shape, you're too busy; If you're too busy to see your friends, you're too busy."

Breathing space is really about quality of life, or more accurately - learning to leave enough space in your life so that you identify what matters to you, and then allocate your life efforts accordingly. It is about taking control and creating environments that support your choices in life, as opposed to reacting to useless information, negative people, and distracting but ultimately unfulfilling stimulus of many sorts.

Without a doubt, Breathing Space is must reading for anyone who wants to master the art of dealing effectively with more information, pressure and time crunch. From the looks of what is to come, that is just about all of us.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Great book!
This is a very insightful book and one that is unlike most others that I've encountered. The author maintains that the typical person in our society today is in a super-rush... Read more
Published on June 7, 2006 by Steven Coleman

5.0 out of 5 stars Overcome stress
This book is nothing short of a sensational. It is one of the most forward-thinking texts I've encountered in quite a while. Read more
Published on May 4, 2005 by Greg Downs

5.0 out of 5 stars Easy read, VERY helpful!
"Breathing Space" is a wonderful concept and is laid out nicely by the author in this easy-to-read book. Read more
Published on January 31, 2005 by Jen Serenski

5.0 out of 5 stars Breathing Space
This is a very good book on a topic that a lot of people will start to be aware of. I mean, gosh, can we all just keep rushing around, working like dogs, and not taking any time... Read more
Published on April 3, 2003 by Nicole Blackburn

4.0 out of 5 stars "Among our most-swiped books!"
The selection in our living room bookshelf is, admittedly, "eclectic." And maybe it's that good salt air, or the thoughtful mode you slip into when you're on an... Read more
Published on December 23, 1998

5.0 out of 5 stars A most practical information management book!!!!
I read this book several years ago, and whenever it seems that information and paperwork and clutter sneakily inches its way back into my life, I immediately refer back to this... Read more
Published on July 5, 1998 by John E. Usalis (usalis@epix.net)

5.0 out of 5 stars Well Worth the Money
* I would give this book an 11, if the scale went that high. From the opening gun, right through to the last words, I found this entire book to be easy to read and extremely... Read more
Published on May 13, 1998

4.0 out of 5 stars A fresh look, in tune with today's realities
A truly different look at space, time, and life management filled with practical methods for focusing your energy on what most makes you happy and fulfilled
Published on March 13, 1997

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