by Anita Bruzzese
Do you take your smartphone to bed because you claim to
use it as a nightlight, say it's the only alarm clock you have, or need to make
sure you don't miss a critical text?
Here's the problem with that thinking: Now that the phone is only an arm's reach away, it's easy to check a few e-mails, perhaps sending off a few responses so you have one fewer thing to do tomorrow.
Here's the problem with that thinking: Now that the phone is only an arm's reach away, it's easy to check a few e-mails, perhaps sending off a few responses so you have one fewer thing to do tomorrow.
You've just stepped onto a very slippery slope that will
make it difficult not to be connected 24/7. You've become one of those millions
of workers who fire off e-mails at midnight or reach for the smartphone before
your first cup of coffee every morning.
You may claim that you have to work this way because your
job — or your employer — demands it.
But Leslie A. Perlow finds that this drive to stay connected all
the time is really your own fault, not something that can be blamed on just an
employer or a job.