There’s always something to howl about.

Today’s Forecast

From my 14-year-old daughter, the very girl that brought you “Louis Vuitton and the French Revolution”, and the (unpublished) account of a local police chase which, according to Emily, resulted in the bad guy “varnishing a weapon”, we have her weather report: A chance of participation. We call her our little American Idiom.

So I am here with my New Year’s resolution: Participation. Ardell warned me, in response to my coming-out acceptance speech when asked to join the Bloodhound gang:

Welcome to “the juggling act”! Let’s see…my blog, their blog, my blog, their blog eenie meenie minie mo…

Oh, youthful exuberance! It has become clear that time management is becoming critical. Unlike Greg, I am not a Broker-Owner, just a Broker Associate. Unlike Russell, I don’t have a multi-level office support structure in place; my organizational chart includes Steve and myself. Unlike all of the other contributors (Cathleen excepted), I don’t have a wife. I am the CEO, COO, CFO, IT and Marketing and Business Development and Human Resources Departments, the wife, the mother, the orderer of the take out dinners, and the cleaner of the litter box. So Ardell’s prophetic juggling act has me, at present, precariously poised on a high wire without a net below.

Despite this, I, like Dan, am committed to more frequent posting of substance (the “of substance” part being the operative) and more consistent and meaningful commentary. Somehow, amidst all of this madness, Steve and I will continue to represent clients in 40 to 50 transactions a year – Pathetically modest by Russell’s standards, but as Greg would say, a respectable amount of Ramen.

Along those lines, I endeavor to accomplish the following in 2007:

  1. Bring more structure to my work day. Being a notes-on-the-back-of-a-cocktail-napkin kind of girl, I have hit the glass ceiling of efficiency with this approach. I need to set times to work, times to play and times to blog. And I need to set some boundaries.
  2. Produce those podcasts rattling around in my head. I vow to have a how-to library completed by year’s end for consumers, available on-line and on disk for potential clients. I am ever hopeful that James Earl Jones is available for voice-overs.
  3. Be more attentive to past client follow-up and be more attentive to friends. In many cases, these are one and the same. I often say that real estate agents make crummy friends. Non-conventional work hours and work weeks, not to mention the on-call nature of the business, often result in canceled social engagements and suffering relationships.
  4. Get back to running. On a personal note, competing demands have swallowed up my “me time” (the 7:00 AM 5-mile runs), which are not only important to me physically but mentally.

I, for one, am looking forward to the frenzy that will be known as 2007. I predict Bloodhound Blog will continue to morph into the on-line authority for real estate analysis and dialogue, while I just might be able to return my own little blog to its roots of delivering statistics and observations of local interest. I can’t wait for the ride.

It seems that everyone surrounding me meets this “competing demands” challenge head on, with grace and ease, and without breaking a sweat. If there is anyone out there like myself who is pulling it off with smoke and mirrors, I would love to hear about it. And, if you have happened upon the answer to the having it all dilemma, please do tell!

Blue skies ahead, and Happy New Year!