The Valley Chronicle - Hobbies are for everyoneng
Hobbies are for everyone
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3 min read
Hidden ways you can find the time
[caption id="attachment_16519" align="alignright" width="386"] Metro ServiceHobbies can play a major role in reducing fatigue, which is often associated with stress.[/caption] Finding time for hobbies can be difficult. Commitments to work and family take up the bulk of most people’s free time, making it hard to squeeze in a favorite hobby. But hobbies can benefit people in some interesting ways. Understanding those hidden benefits may compel some people to make more time for their favorite downtime activities. In 2006, Dr. W. Eriksen of the University of Oslo published a study on the impact of physical leisure time activities on stress associated with work on nurses’ aides. What was found is that these leisure activities or hobbies played a major role in reducing fatigue, which is often associated with stress. Ways hobbies can make a difference Hobbies can improve your efficiency. Penciling more activities into your day planner may not seem like something that will help you create more time for hobbies, but, then again, it just might. For example, if you know you have a softball game or choir practice at night, then you might waste less time surfing the internet or talking around the water cooler during the workday. In a 2017 study conducted for the staffing firm OfficeTeam, researchers found that the average office employee spends about five hours per week on his or her mobile phone doing things that have nothing to do with the job. That’s five hours you could be working, opening up more time for hobbies before or after work. Hobbies can foster social connections. In his 2000 book, ‘Bowling Alone’, political scientist Robert Putnam described a reduction of in-person social intercourse that once enriched Americans’ social lives. By making more time for hobbies, particularly those that promote interaction with other adults, men and women can foster social connections that otherwise might never blossom. Hobbies can provide health benefits. The American Institute of Stress notes that some hobbies can help people reduce their stress. For example, some 56 million women in the United States now knit or crochet. That marks a 51 percent increase over the last decade. That revival is attributed to the stress-reducing properties of knitting and crocheting. Men and women coping with stress need not learn how to wield a sewing needle to alleviate their stress. Activities that promote slowing down and induce a relaxation response similar to knitting and crocheting can be equally beneficial. It can increase quality time with your children. Parents with hobbies can double dip, using the time they would ordinarily spend with their children to teach them some of their favorite hobbies. Take kids along when you go fishing or teach them how to plant flowers and tend to a garden. This is a great way to increase quality time with your children while also affording you a chance to continue engaging in your favorite hobbies. Hobbies can benefit people in ways they never imagined, making those pursuits worthwhile no matter how much or how little time you may have. -Metro Service
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