![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The only way you could have become a member and we could have received your details and authorisation to charge your account is that you manually entered your details into the signup form and agreed to the Terms & Conditions. Trainline will never share your information with us. More details can be found at The charges you see in your account are the monthly membership fees for My Tme Rewards. It's free for the first 30 days so that you can try it out, and after that, there is a monthly fee. The membership benefits include 10% cashback at over 1000 online retailers, 20% off popular gift cards and a monthly cashback reward. My Time Rewards is an online savings programme for people who shop online regularly. Break Time is a chain of convenience stores and gas stations owned and operated by MFA.Hi Darren, You can be assured that My Time Rewards generates significant cashback savings for its members. It is also headquartered in Columbia and operates 74 stores across the state. All Break Time locations sell MFA Oil gasoline and BOSS diesel fuel. Nearly half a dozen Break Time locations have a car wash. The convenience store offers a variety of food and drink options, including their proprietary Dashboard Diner sandwiches, Smokestack Bar.B.Q., Krispy Krunchy Chicken, Hunt Brothers Pizza, and homemade breakfast sandwiches. The locations have beer caves as well as coffee and cappuccino options. Since 2017, Break Time customers have had the opportunity to earn fuel discounts, free drinks, 'Break Time Bucks,' and more rewards through their store visits and MyTime Rewards use. In 2019, MyTime Rewards earned two industry awards for marketing innovation and program design. Have you ever taken a break during a big project, and wound up killing your momentum? The company is one of the area's largest distributors of E85 and E10 corn-based ethanol fuels.5 Ways to Take Breaks and Reward Yourself Without Killing Your Momentum MFA owns several Big O Tires and Jiffy Lube franchises in the mid-Missouri area. You’re busy working on your novel, or other paperwork, and starting to get into the zone, when…your stomach rumbles, or your coworker (or kid) interrupts you, or you simply decide you’ve worked hard enough. So you gt up, get a snack, drink some water, surf some YouTube…and you’re gone. Your focus is zapped, your motivation has plummeted, and the day ends without you finishing what you planned to finish. We all know that if you don’t take breaks you will burn out eventually. It’s unhealthy to hunker down for hours at a stretch without getting up to stretch, use the bathroom, rest your eyes.īut breaks have a habit of derailing us from our projects - especially if they are particularly dreadful projects that we don’t want to do in the first place, but have to. So how do you balance health with productivity? How do you take breaks without getting distracted (as we so easily do nowadays) and leaving important tasks unfinished? How to take healthy breaks without killing momentum: 1. Refuel before you think you have toĮveryone is a little different in terms of how long it takes to get “into the zone” on any work project. That’s why the Pomodoro Technique (use a timer to set 25 minute intervals of work time with 5 minute breaks) does not work for everyone. When I am working on a novel, for instance, or some other absorbing story-related project, I may need to go for several hours at a stretch so as not to lose my train of ideas, and that ephemeral feeling that I want to capture. However, doing this for 8 hours at a stretch (which I have been known to do) is not healthy. This may sound romantic, but it’s a quick road to sickness - mental and physical. So I am learning to stop BEFORE I feel like I have to. They say, if you feel thirsty, you’re already dehydrated. It’s the same with other basic physiological needs. Our minds are able to suppress our physical needs to incredible degrees. ![]()
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