Ideas for How to Break Pandemic Pitfalls
Have you fallen into habits you'd like to change? Duke experts share helpful strategies
Ask Hilary Bouton-Verville why she likes working remotely, and the director of scientific research for the Duke Human Vaccine Institute lists several reasons.
She has a comfortable home office, chat tools such as Microsoft Teams to keep her in touch with colleagues and video conferencing tools that make meetings a breeze.
But like many in the Duke workforce with work arrangements altered by the COVID-19 pandemic, Bouton-Verville also knows the downsides of remote work as workdays often bleed over into personal time.
鈥淚t seems like work never stops,鈥 Bouton-Verville said.
The pandemic has left many with habits they鈥檇 like to change. With help from Duke experts, here are strategies that may help fix pitfalls.
Embrace New Ways to Move
Prior to the pandemic, David Beratan did weekend yoga and pilates classes on campus. Combined with regular afternoon walks, Beratan, 62, the R.J. Reynolds professor of Chemistry, had a routine that kept him feeling healthy.
After COVID-19 hit, and Beratan started working from home, those activities were interrupted.
After roughly a month of inactivity, Beratan found Duke Recreation & Physical Education鈥檚 online fitness classes, which can be accessed by staff, faculty and alumni with a .
鈥淚 roll out my yoga mat in my office and push the chairs aside,鈥 Beratan said. 鈥淚t works pretty well. I haven鈥檛 crashed into my desk or my office chair yet. It鈥檚 been really good.鈥
Leigh Ann Garstecki, director of fitness and wellness for Duke Rec, said to explore new ways to stay active if regular routines are interrupted because movement is vital to physical and emotional health.
Any form of activity, from walks to , like those available from , or Duke Rec鈥檚 live and archived online home workouts, some of which are available for free on , can keep you on the path to wellness.
鈥淚f we don鈥檛 get moving and move our bodies, then all the stress we鈥檙e feeling right now is compounded,鈥 Garstecki said. 鈥淪omething is better than nothing right now.鈥
Build a Work-Life Buffer
Prior to the pandemic, Bouton-Verville of the Duke Human Vaccine Institute left work ready to spend time with her husband, head to the gym or enjoy dinner. But now, evenings tend to include checking email and finishing work tasks.
She knows a major factor in these blurred lines is the lack of a commute, which was a line of demarcation between work and home portions of her day.
鈥淢y commute was a time to decompress,鈥 Bouton-Verville said. 鈥淚 could put on a podcast or listen to music and just have a little me time while I鈥檓 on my way back to the house. I don鈥檛 have that now.鈥
Kyla Machell Blalock, assistant professor in Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, said that a simple way maintain boundaries is to create an end-of-day routine.
When it鈥檚 time to put work down, turn on music or go for a walk. Before making dinner or diving into household chores, do something enjoyable that offers time to decompress.
鈥淚t can be good to have an end-of-day ritual, something that signals to yourself that the workday is over,鈥 Blalock said. 鈥淚n the office, you have your commute which creates this boundary between work and home. While working from home, find something you can do that lets you know that work is over.鈥
Make Snacks Count
Eating is prohibited in Perkins Library鈥檚 , where Beth Doyle and her team repair Duke Libraries鈥 rare and delicate materials.
While working from home more, Doyle has easier access to snacks.
鈥淚鈥檓 a stress eater,鈥 said Doyle, the Leona B. Carpenter Senior Conservator and Head of the Conservation Services Department. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been very stressful to work from home, manage a department and make sure the people who report to me are OK.鈥
Doyle isn鈥檛 alone.
According to a published in August, 30 percent of respondents say they鈥檙e eating worse now.
Dietitian Elisabetta Politi said snacking during the workday is nothing to feel guilty about. When you go more than six hours between meals, everyone鈥檚 body needs the extra boost of fuel that a snack provides.
While carrots and hummus, apple slices or nuts are healthy choices, making those choices can be difficult since the allure of candy and potato chips is strong. So, Politi champions the concept of mindful snacking.
She鈥檚 found that when people set aside a few minutes to pre-portion their snack, whatever it is, and eat it without distractions, they鈥檙e more satisfied and have the urge to snack less.
鈥淒on鈥檛 watch TV or sit at the computer working, just go to a specific place, sit down and focus on eating the snack and make it a mindful experience,鈥 Politi said.
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Help share the proactive and extensive work being done by all Duke community members during the COVID-19 outbreak. Send ideas, shout-outs and photographs through or write working@duke.edu.