"Too much of anything, Lieutenant, even love, isn’t necessarily a good thing." — Captain Kirk, The Trouble with Tribbles
I love my job being a freelance writer. I telecommute, can take care of my pets and my Mom, and pick and choose my assignments. After years of having really crappy jobs like working in retail, it’s a kick looking forward to going to work for a change. So I don’t really like taking a day off from a job I love.
However, I guess I love it a little too much. On Saturday, I physically collapsed after taking a bath. When I wondered aloud to my Mom why it happened (after I revived, of course), she said, "Whaddya expect? You’ve been working ten hours a day for the past three months."
I Have?
"Mom, are you sure?"
"Of course I’m sure. Your office is my bedroom."
Ah, yes, that’s how she knows. I never really took track of my health as a kid, so Mom has had plenty pf practice monitoring my health. So I work at the computer or at the filing cabinet or at researching articles ten hours a day seven days a week. I’m only in my late 30’s. Should be a piece of cake.
Obviously not.
Emergency Micro Holiday
On Saturday, I had to lie down and not move for about an hour before I could I do anything. Then, I had to (sigh) turn off the computer and watch two hours of crap television. Then I cracked open a novel I’d never gotten around to reading — The Hunt for Red October by Tom Clancy — watched my goldfish do their fishy thing for a while (wow — tow of them are changing color) and then I was drowsy enough for bed.
The next day, I woke up refreshed and ready to go. I only worked about six hours, though. I might only work five today. It’s okay to take a day off. At least, that’s what I keep telling myself.






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[...] is how I schedule time off — I don’t. I let Nature decide when to take time off, such as just this past Sunday when a series of thunderstorms made it impossible to use the [...]