Skip to main content

The Power of Caffeine

Day 3 - no caffeine yet, and I'm struggling.

I figured i'll do the whole 'eat/drink healthy' thing during busy season by cutting off soda/coffee for atleast 21 days, following the 21 day hump rule, where-in I need to try something for atleast 21 days before giving up on it.

But my system is currently low on fuel, and I'm struggling. Not sure if it's a good idea to audit and not be caffeinated to get the energy to do it. Check that - definitely not a good idea.
I've tried tea, V8 vegetable juice, fruit juice, water, odwalla protein shake and I'm still struggling to be pro-active.
This reminds me of two instances -
we had an intern during busy season, and this kid just got into a food coma every day after lunch. The poor kid wasn't used to office hours being that he was still in college, and was literally half-asleep in his chair by 1 pm every day. Not a good impression made as an intern.
This other kid was this pristine 'eat healthy' kid who never touched soda or coffee, and lecturing us everytime we drank a cup. He always ended up shutting down mentally by 7, which during busy season is just not good. If anyone has any good healthy suggestions to stay awake and energized while at work, please post a comment to this effect (And don't say that quitting would help)

Comments

kokostiletto said…
Thank you for your blog! hahaha every single busy season I try to cut back on all those sugary drinks - never works! This year, my engagement team is doing "the biggest loser" as motivation!
notfordisplay said…
Just checked out your blog, I'm obviously not in tune with most of it being that I'm a guy, but props for having the time to blog on a completely different topic while you're in your public accounting career.
Anonymous said…
Hi

I know this blog isn't meant to be about the technical side of auditing but what planning do you do prior to starting an audit?

In regards to feeling tired at work after i eat lunch i feel very tired so it helps to not be sitting down straight after lunch. But try drinking green tea after becuase it has alot of caffeine and is also excellent for your health i read somewhere if you drink green tea you are 40 times less likely to get a cold then someone who doen't drink tea at all, but it makes you urinate alot.

Thanks
Anonymous said…
Psy-trance. It fuels 15 hours days.

It's funny when you realize you're the last one in the office, so you can just take off your headphones and blast your speakers.

And anon's hint to run around (or at least stay standing) is also a Good Idea whenever possible.

Popular posts from this blog

ADP/Payroll

Just realized that the very payroll/adp reports we all enjoyed looking at in order to see how much our client contacts made, now seem to piss me off. Especially when your main contact, who couldn't tell a debit from a credit, makes significantly more than you, and leaves at 5. It's almost guaranteed to get you in a foul mood and yak with your team about the ridiculous salaries that certain employees get when compared to yours.

should you choose to audit financial services?

I'm trying to decide whether to audit financial services companies or non-financial services companies. What would you say are the pros and cons of either industries? Do individuals who choose non-FS have less career mobility within the firm or if they decide not to stay with the B4 after a few years? Really depends on what you'd like to do after (unless you really love auditing). If you want to a controller,etc. at a p/e firm or a hedge fund down the road, you'd want to go into financial services. The pay won't be too bad, especially if you get a share of the insane bonuses they dole out. If you want to audit industries with tangible products and want to get a better understanding of the operations of such businesses, then other industries are the way to go.In terms of mobility outside the firm, auditing other industries is the way to go since you have plenty of options when you exit the audit world. For example, in 2008, after Lehman collapsed, it was incredibly hard ...

auditing vs consulting

I was wondering if you could break down the career opportunities in auditing and consulting (in a big 4). I know that consulting pays more in a big 4 and has more interesting work, but it seems that auditing has extremely good exit opportunities (Financial controller, CFO etc). Any thoughts on which is better in the long run? Well there's different consulting services offered by public accounting companies - the most popular being IT consulting and risk consulting. There are also other consulting services offered, but these two hire the most. Do they pay more? Yes, but not by much. Not enough for you to say: Shoot, the $$ is a huge reason for me to move over. Is the work more interesting than audit? Yes. You're actually looking over a company's processes and telling them what to do instead of what not to do (audit). Everyone I know who's made the switch likes it waay better than audit. In the long run though, choosing audit vs consulting really depends on what you want ...