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Squeezing in a few long weekends a year is often the closest
entrepreneurs get to a vacation. But can these miniholidays relieve
business stress? Yes, say the experts-especially if they are
fantasy vacations.
It's for that reason, perhaps, that entrepreneurs are
turning to sports weekends, says Steven Wilson, vice president of
Sports Tours Inc., a Hatfield, Massachusetts, company that books
spectator sporting event trips (including air fare, hotel, rental
car and great tickets to the game) for passionate sports fans with
no time to plan vacations themselves.
Ron Ferron, owner of Center Machine Inc., a 12-person Ludlow,
Massachusetts, company that makes machinery parts, is just such a
person. An avid fan of the University of Massachusetts basketball
team, Ferron would follow them just about anywhere-if he had the
time. Last December when the Minutemen were playing in the Hawaiian
Classic, Ferron called Sports Tours a week before the tournament,
asking if they could book a trip for him and his wife to Hawaii and
get them tickets for the team's three games. "They took
care of everything in a couple of days," says Ferron.
While people are now interested in baseball road trips to watch
the boys of summer do their stuff at some of the nation's
greatest ballparks, Wilson says, attention will soon shift to
professional and college football weekends and the January 27 Super
Bowl in New Orleans. For more information, call Sports Tours at
(800) 722-7701.
Whether you're commuting by train or car, the evening trip
home can be productive. Use the time to destress from a hard
day at the office with these exercises:
Breathe deeply. To a slow count of eight, inhale slowly,
hold your breath, and exhale slowly. Repeat as many times as
needed.
Shoulder squeezes. Keeping the rest of your body relaxed,
shrug your shoulders up to your ears. Drop them; pause and relax.
Repeat as necessary.
Sleep it off. Try a five-minute nap (only if you're a
passenger, of course). Step 1: With eyes open, begin
counting to 10, closing your eyes very slowly as you count. Step
2: When your eyelids are shut, say to yourself, "I am
resting and dozing." Count to 10 in this closed-eye position.
Step 3: Open your eyes very slowly. When they're fully
open, say to yourself, "I'm still resting and
dozing." Step 4: Repeat steps 1, 2 and 3 for about five
minutes. Then blink your eyes quickly 10 to 20 times, and then say
to yourself, "I am fully awake now."
Walk it off. Stride quickly around the parking lot before
getting into your car to head home. If you're commuting by bus
or train, get off one stop before your usual and walk the rest of
the way home briskly.
Or take a slow stroll and enjoy the sights and sounds of the
evening-a great way to forget the demands of business.
Even if the kids don't ask "What did you bring
me?" the minute you return from a business trip, it's nice
to be able to pull a gift out of your luggage-something inexpensive
and easy to transport.
Many parents use their business trips to start children on
collections of mugs, buttons, pennants, city magazines, maps, key
chains, posters or T-shirts. It's a great way to satisfy
kids' squirreling instincts.
Posters and maps make good wall coverings, mugs from different
states can be lined up and used as containers for the infinite junk
items kids amass, and T-shirts are always in style and necessary. A
sports enthusiast will love college pennants featuring a favorite
sport team-and probably be fascinated enough to follow the
team's accomplishments in the newspaper and locate the college
on a map.
Each of these items can be bought at a hotel or airport, so you
don't have to spend any time rushing around the city looking
for a shop. And children look forward to getting these mementos,
which become tokens of your relationship.
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