[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$fRdy4Ph-Pr3_YSRANo4UELfNtlCWM9i03GPoJzUPa93A":3,"$f80KXY_ejVoYrLIulMIYn0h7XQg6DnKOegWuq_wKSB3Y":37,"$fHlqlF0zsH6L19m1zPNeTZ7Dj4uK3J-bFVLSwnCL_28E":129},{"data":4,"meta":33},[5,9,13,17,21,25,29],{"id":6,"name":7,"slug":8},1,"Career & Finance","career-and-finance",{"id":10,"name":11,"slug":12},11,"After Hours","after-hours",{"id":14,"name":15,"slug":16},3,"Wellness","wellness",{"id":18,"name":19,"slug":20},12,"Style","style",{"id":22,"name":23,"slug":24},4,"Voices","voices",{"id":26,"name":27,"slug":28},2,"Mindset","mindset",{"id":30,"name":31,"slug":32},10,"Nourish","food",{"pagination":34},{"page":6,"pageSize":35,"pageCount":6,"total":36},25,7,{"data":38,"meta":127},[39],{"id":40,"title":41,"createdAt":42,"updatedAt":43,"publishedAt":44,"content":45,"slug":46,"coffees":14,"seo_title":41,"keywords":47,"seo_desc":48,"featuredImage":49,"category":93,"author":97,"img":126},66,"Reminders for a Happy New Year 2022","2022-01-04T20:37:46.332Z","2024-06-21T18:39:50.196Z","2022-01-04T20:37:49.674Z","\u003Cp>Nobody can argue that 2021 has been a very challenging year for pretty much everyone. The \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F10-things-we-have-learnt-from-the-covid-19-pandemic\">COVID-19 pandemic\u003C\u002Fa> has affected us in many ways, personally, financially, professionally, etc.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>However, at the dawn of the new year, we are all \u003Cstrong>optimistic\u003C\u002Fstrong> about the future, and we hope that this year will be better and we will start \u003Cstrong>getting our lives back on track\u003C\u002Fstrong>.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>What is also essential and we should be grateful for is the fact that we are here and we have a brand new year to challenge ourselves in the best way possible.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>For this new year, and before we make our New Year’s Resolutions, we must remember some significant things, especially every time we feel that things aren’t going the way we want.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cimg src=\"https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002F2022_new_a153027394.jpg\" alt=\"2022_new.jpg\">\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch4>Life can be very unpredictable.\u003C\u002Fh4>\n\u003Cp>If you haven’t made up your mind after what we’ve experienced over the last two years, then it’s time. \u003Cstrong>Don’t be afraid of change\u003C\u002Fstrong>; embrace it, and you will be rewarded.\nFocus on what change has taught you, the evolution it has brought about in your life, how it has prepared you for the future.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch4>You have more power than you can imagine.\u003C\u002Fh4>\n\u003Cp>If you disagree, \u003Cstrong>step back a bit\u003C\u002Fstrong>, and think about how many of the events you experienced and the circumstances under which you experienced them would have seemed possible two years ago. List all those unprecedented events you encountered, situations you overcame, and habits you adopted; these are your gain; these are what expanded your comfort zone. These show you that \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fan-important-message-for-you\">\u003Cem>you are stronger, smarter, and more resilient than you think\u003C\u002Fem>\u003C\u002Fa>.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch4>It’s never too late to change course.\u003C\u002Fh4>\n\u003Cp>The direction of our lives is not an accidental circumstance. As much as you may not be able to influence external circumstances, how you navigate these uncharted waters is your responsibility and is something that you should be able to detect.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch4>Today will not come again.\u003C\u002Fh4>\n\u003Cp>Plan your future, work for it but don’t forget to enjoy and be grateful for the present. \u003Cem>Happiness is made of small moments in the present\u003C\u002Fem>, moments when you create or enjoy memories, when you enjoy the presence of people when you dream or even struggle for the future...\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cimg src=\"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002F2022_goals_ab605ae8ae.jpg\" alt=\"2022_goals.jpg\">\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch4>The old self is different.\u003C\u002Fh4>\n\u003Cp>We often see the new year for a “new me” springboard. And that is like rejecting the old self. Remember, the “old me” is lovable. They are the ones who brought you this far, despite their mistakes and failures. Don’t erase it. Don’t disparage them. On the contrary, look at them with sincerity, love them, say thank you and well done, and celebrate their accomplishments. They are your achievements.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch4>Happiness is a vehicle, not a destination.\u003C\u002Fh4>\n\u003Cp>Stop waiting for certain circumstances to be happy. Decide to be happy to create the right conditions in your life. As Kavafis [a renowned Greek poet] mentions in his poem \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.poetryfoundation.org\u002Fpoems\u002F51296\u002Fithaka-56d22eef917ec\">Ithaka\u003C\u002Fa>, \u003Cem>“As you set out for Ithaka hope your road is a long one, full of adventure, full of discovery.”\u003C\u002Fem> \u003Cstrong>Ithaka is the destination, but you should always enjoy the ride!\u003C\u002Fstrong>\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch4>The young self is beautiful.\u003C\u002Fh4>\n\u003Cp>Honoring my old self does not mean being blind to their shortcomings and avoiding \u003Cstrong>evolution\u003C\u002Fstrong>. Each step of improvement forms a new wonderful part of who you are; pursue it with passion. Life is more beautiful when the old and new coexist harmoniously and productively.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch4>Take care of yourself.\u003C\u002Fh4>\n\u003Cp>Commit to \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-best-investment-you-can-make\">taking care\u003C\u002Fa> of your \u003Cem>physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual health\u003C\u002Fem>. Make it a priority. If you get caught up in the routine and can’t \u003Cstrong>motivate\u003C\u002Fstrong> yourself, sign up for our \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002F\">newsletter\u003C\u002Fa> and read all you need to know about your personal and professional development. Nothing lasts forever. Not even fear, pain, insecurity, uncertainty. You just have to choose that it’s time to move on. \u003Cem>As long as you choose that you feel safe because you have you\u003C\u002Fem>...\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch4>Find your tribe.\u003C\u002Fh4>\n\u003Cp>The people you choose to share your time and energy with greatly influence the direction and quality of your life. For this reason, you should always choose wisely the people around you. This year, be surrounded by people who bring the best out of you, people who cheer you up, and people with whom you are comfortable and compatible.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Are you ready for a wonderful New Year #2022?\u003C\u002Fp>\n","reminders-for-a-happy-new-year-2022","2022, new year, resolutions, reminder, women, motivation","The New Year is here, and we all are ready to seize every single day of it! Before setting up your New Year's Resolutions, read those small reminders to cheer you up!",{"id":50,"name":51,"alternativeText":52,"caption":52,"width":53,"height":54,"formats":55,"hash":87,"ext":57,"mime":60,"size":88,"url":89,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":91,"updatedAt":92},155,"2022_1.jpg","",1600,900,{"large":56,"small":66,"medium":73,"thumbnail":80},{"ext":57,"url":58,"hash":59,"mime":60,"name":61,"path":62,"size":63,"width":64,"height":65},".jpg","https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_2022_1_f33dd19dfe.jpg","large_2022_1_f33dd19dfe","image\u002Fjpeg","large_2022_1.jpg",null,74.74,1000,563,{"ext":57,"url":67,"hash":68,"mime":60,"name":69,"path":62,"size":70,"width":71,"height":72},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_2022_1_f33dd19dfe.jpg","small_2022_1_f33dd19dfe","small_2022_1.jpg",21.02,500,281,{"ext":57,"url":74,"hash":75,"mime":60,"name":76,"path":62,"size":77,"width":78,"height":79},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_2022_1_f33dd19dfe.jpg","medium_2022_1_f33dd19dfe","medium_2022_1.jpg",42.17,750,422,{"ext":57,"url":81,"hash":82,"mime":60,"name":83,"path":62,"size":84,"width":85,"height":86},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_2022_1_f33dd19dfe.jpg","thumbnail_2022_1_f33dd19dfe","thumbnail_2022_1.jpg",6.21,245,138,"2022_1_f33dd19dfe",192.81,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002F2022_1_f33dd19dfe.jpg","aws-s3","2022-01-04T20:22:11.606Z","2022-01-04T20:22:11.662Z",{"id":26,"name":27,"slug":28,"createdAt":94,"updatedAt":95,"publishedAt":96},"2020-12-24T19:15:46.057Z","2025-10-01T19:50:39.801Z","2024-06-26T07:27:59.419Z",{"id":98,"name":99,"slug":100,"instagram":101,"facebook":102,"bio":103,"createdAt":104,"updatedAt":105,"publishedAt":106,"linkedIn":62,"avatar":107,"avatarImg":125},6,"The Working Gal Team","the-working-gal-team","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.instagram.com\u002Fthe_working_gal\u002F","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.facebook.com\u002Ftheworkinggal","At The Working Gal, we prioritize collective strategic insight. This piece reflects the shared expertise of our editorial board and specialists, delivering a 360° analysis of modern business and executive lifestyle.","2021-02-14T21:17:05.180Z","2026-04-12T03:32:03.659Z","2021-02-14T21:17:25.177Z",{"id":108,"name":109,"alternativeText":52,"caption":52,"width":110,"height":110,"formats":111,"hash":120,"ext":113,"mime":116,"size":121,"url":122,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":123,"updatedAt":124},108,"Untitled-7.png",250,{"thumbnail":112},{"ext":113,"url":114,"hash":115,"mime":116,"name":117,"path":62,"size":118,"width":119,"height":119},".png","https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_Untitled_7_b2bf764bcd.png","thumbnail_Untitled_7_b2bf764bcd","image\u002Fpng","thumbnail_Untitled-7.png",12.8,156,"Untitled_7_b2bf764bcd",22.3,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002FUntitled_7_b2bf764bcd.png","2021-02-14T21:15:43.138Z","2021-02-14T21:15:43.147Z","https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002FUntitled_7_b2bf764bcd.png","https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002F2022_1_f33dd19dfe.jpg",{"pagination":128},{"page":6,"pageSize":35,"pageCount":6,"total":6},{"data":130,"meta":441},[131,200,267,312,378],{"id":132,"title":133,"createdAt":134,"updatedAt":135,"publishedAt":136,"content":137,"slug":138,"coffees":14,"seo_title":133,"keywords":139,"seo_desc":140,"featuredImage":141,"category":170,"author":173,"img":199},65,"How to Be More Productive at Work: 10 Research-Backed Strategies That Actually Work","2021-09-19T13:38:17.272Z","2025-12-15T05:57:19.669Z","2021-09-19T13:38:45.695Z","We all want to be more productive. We [read the articles](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fbest-ai-productivity-tools), download the apps, buy the planners. And yet, at the end of too many days, we find ourselves wondering where the hours went—still staring at a to-do list that seems longer than when we started.\n\nHere's what most productivity advice gets wrong: it focuses on doing more. But true productivity isn't about cramming more tasks into your day. It's about getting the right things done with less effort and stress. It's about [working smarter, not harder](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fstrategic-productivity-how-to-work-smart-not-hard)—and actually having energy left at the end of the day.\n\nThe strategies below aren't just popular tips repeated endlessly online. They're backed by research in psychology, neuroscience, and organizational behavior. They work because they align with how our brains actually function—not how we wish they did.\n\n## What Productivity Actually Means\n\nFirst things first: let's be clear about what we're aiming for. Productivity [isn't about being busy](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fdon-t-be-busy-be-productive). It's not about answering the most emails or attending the most meetings or working the longest hours.\n\nReal productivity means producing meaningful results efficiently. It's the ratio between what you accomplish and the time and energy you invest. A productive day isn't necessarily a packed day—it's a day where you moved important things forward without depleting yourself.\n\nWith that definition in mind, here are ten strategies that will genuinely help you get more of the right things done.\n\n## 1\\. Stop Multitasking (It's an Illusion)\n\nLet's start with the hardest truth: multitasking doesn't work. Despite what we tell ourselves, our brains cannot actually do two cognitive tasks simultaneously. What we call \"multitasking\" is actually rapid task-switching—and it comes with a significant cost.\n\nResearch from Stanford University found that [heavy multitaskers are actually worse at filtering irrelevant information](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.pnas.org\u002Fcontent\u002F106\u002F37\u002F15583), worse at switching between tasks, and worse at organizing information in their memory. Other studies have shown that task-switching can reduce productivity by up to 40% and increase error rates significantly.\n\n![productivity-multitasking.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fproductivity_multitasking_420bd3234d.jpg)\n\nEvery time you switch tasks—from your report to your email to your phone to your [colleague's](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F5-toxic-phrases-used-by-colleagues-with-a-huge-ego) question—your brain needs time to reorient. This \"switching cost\" accumulates throughout the day, leaving you exhausted despite feeling like you were working constantly.\n\n**What to do instead:** Single-task deliberately. When you're working on something, work on that one thing. Close unnecessary tabs. Put your phone face-down or in another room. If a new task or thought arises, write it down for later rather than acting on it immediately. Give your full attention to one thing at a time, and you'll finish faster with better results.\n\n## 2\\. Start Each Day with Your Most Important Task\n\nYour Most Important Task (MIT) is the one thing that, if you accomplished nothing else today, would make the day feel worthwhile. It's usually the task you're most tempted to postpone—the one that requires real thought and effort, the one that moves your most important goals forward.\n\nAs Stephen Covey wrote in \"[The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People](https:\u002F\u002Famzn.to\u002F4aR0SSD),\" (if you haven’t already read it, please order it now), putting first things first is essential. Yet most of us start our days with email, which means we start by reacting to other people's priorities instead of advancing our own.\n\nThere's also a neurological reason to tackle important work early. Our prefrontal cortex—responsible for complex thinking, [decision-making](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fdecision-fatigue), and self-control—is freshest in the morning. As the day progresses and we make more decisions, this \"executive function\" depletes. By afternoon, we're operating with diminished cognitive capacity, even if we don't feel tired.\n\n**What to do instead:** Identify your MIT the night before or first thing in the morning. Before checking email, before [attending meetings](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fbody-language-hacks-for-authority), before handling \"quick\" tasks, spend your first 60-90 minutes on this priority. Protect this time fiercely. Everything else can wait.\n\n## 3\\. Use Time Blocking to Structure Your Day\n\nTime blocking means scheduling specific blocks of time for specific types of work—rather than just keeping a to-do list and hoping you'll get to everything. Instead of \"work on report\" as a task, you block 9:00-11:00 AM for report writing. Instead of \"answer emails,\" you schedule 2:00-2:30 PM for email.\n\nThis technique works because it forces you to be realistic about how much time tasks actually take. It also protects your focused work time from being nibbled away by meetings and interruptions. When someone asks \"Are you free at 10 AM?\" you [can honestly say no](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F50-ways-to-say-no-politely)—you have a commitment (even if that commitment is to yourself and your own work).\n\n![productivity-most-important-task.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fproductivity_most_important_task_182d2740ea.jpg)\n\nCal Newport, author of \"[Deep Work](https:\u002F\u002Famzn.to\u002F48BjLHQ),\" (another excellent read) is a major proponent of time blocking. He argues that knowledge workers who don't control their time will have it controlled for them—usually by whatever seems most urgent in the moment, which is rarely what's most important.\n\n**How to implement:** At the start of each week, block time for your most important work. Include blocks for email, meetings, and administrative tasks—but also blocks for focused, uninterrupted work. Review and adjust daily. The goal isn't to follow the schedule perfectly; it's to be intentional about how you spend your time.\n\n## 4\\. Try the Pomodoro Technique for Focused Sprints\n\nThe Pomodoro Technique, developed by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s, is elegantly simple: work for 25 minutes with complete focus, then take a 5-minute break. After four \"pomodoros,\" take a longer break of 15-30 minutes. Repeat.\n\nThis technique works for several reasons. First, 25 minutes is short enough to feel manageable—you can do almost anything for 25 minutes. Second, the built-in breaks prevent mental fatigue and maintain motivation. Third, the timer creates a mild sense of urgency that helps combat [procrastination](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fwhy-do-we-procrastinate). And fourth, tracking pomodoros gives you data on how long tasks actually take, improving future planning.\n\n**How to implement:** Use any timer—your phone, a physical timer, or a Pomodoro app. When the timer starts, work on one task only. If something else comes to mind, jot it down and return to your task. When the timer rings, stop—even mid-sentence—and take your break. The [discipline](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fself-discipline-7-proven-ways) of starting and stopping on time is part of what makes this work.\n\n## 5\\. Take Real Breaks (Not Phone Breaks)\n\n![productivity-take-breaks-increase.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fproductivity_take_breaks_increase_096c916742.jpg)\n\nMany people believe that working continuously for hours demonstrates dedication and maximizes output. [Research says otherwise](https:\u002F\u002Fhbr.org\u002Ftopic\u002Fsubject\u002Fproductivity). Our brains need periodic rest to maintain focus, consolidate learning, and restore motivation. Working without breaks doesn't make you more productive—it makes you less effective over time.\n\nBut here's what most people get wrong: [scrolling through social media](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fpsychology-social-media-women) isn't a break. Checking email isn't a break. These activities keep your brain in consumption mode and often add stress (that news article, that work request, that comparison to someone's curated life). A real break means stepping away from screens entirely.\n\nStudies on \"attention restoration\" show that exposure to nature—even briefly—significantly improves focus and cognitive performance. A short walk outside, looking out a window at trees, or simply stepping away from your desk can reset your mental state in ways that phone-scrolling cannot.\n\n**What actually restores you:** A walk outside (even 10 minutes helps), stretching, getting a coffee and actually drinking it without doing anything else, chatting with a colleague about non-work topics, looking out a window, or simply closing your eyes and breathing. Your brain needs genuine rest, not a different kind of stimulation.\n\n## 6\\. Use the Two-Minute Rule for Small Tasks\n\nDavid Allen's \"[Getting Things Done](https:\u002F\u002Famzn.to\u002F4q8wE1O)\" (yes, you need to read this as well\\!) methodology includes a simple but powerful rule: if a task takes less than two minutes, do it immediately. Don't add it to a list, don't schedule it for later—just do it now.\n\nThe logic is practical: the time spent capturing, organizing, and remembering a two-minute task often exceeds the time the task itself would take. By handling these immediately, you prevent them from accumulating into an overwhelming backlog of small items that clutter your mind and your to-do list.\n\nThis rule also provides quick wins that build momentum. Completing small tasks gives you a sense of progress and clears mental space for bigger work. Just be careful not to use two-minute tasks as procrastination—don't spend your MIT time doing tiny tasks that could wait.\n\n**How to implement:** When a task comes in—an email, a request, a thought—quickly assess: can this be done in under two minutes? If yes, do it immediately. If no, schedule it, delegate it, or add it to your task system. But don't let quick tasks interrupt your focused work blocks—batch them for transition times between blocks.\n\n## 7\\. Batch Similar Tasks Together\n\nTask batching means grouping similar activities and doing them in one dedicated block, rather than scattering them throughout the day. All your emails in one or two sessions. All your phone calls back-to-back. All your administrative tasks in one batch.\n\nThis works because of the \"switching cost\" we discussed earlier. Each time you shift between different types of work—from writing to email to meetings to writing again—your brain needs time to recalibrate. By batching similar tasks, you minimize these transitions and maintain better focus within each type of work.\n\nEmail is the best example. Many people check email continuously throughout the day, which means they're constantly interrupting their other work. Research suggests checking email just two or three times daily actually improves both productivity and wellbeing—you respond almost as quickly while reclaiming hours of focused time.\n\n![productivity-arrange-meetings-calls.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fproductivity_arrange_meetings_calls_e282cf7295.jpg)\n\nCommon batches to create: Email (2-3 times daily), phone calls and messages, administrative tasks, meetings (cluster on certain days if possible), creative\u002Fwriting work, review and planning. Identify your recurring task types and assign them dedicated time blocks.\n\n## 8\\. Delegate More Than You Think You Should\n\nDelegation is one of the most powerful productivity multipliers—and one of the hardest for high-achievers to embrace. Our [inner control freak](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fkill-your-inner-control-freak) insists that we can do it better, faster, or more reliably ourselves. And maybe that's true. But at what cost?\n\nEvery hour you spend on a task someone else could do is an hour you're not spending on work that only you can do. The question isn't \"Can I do this task?\" It's \"Is this the highest-value use of my time?\" If someone else could do it—even if they'd do it differently or need some guidance—delegation is usually the right choice.\n\nEffective delegation also develops your team. People grow by taking on new responsibilities. By holding onto everything, you're not just limiting yourself—you're limiting others' development.\n\n**How to delegate better:** Be clear about the outcome you need, not just the task. Give context on why it matters. Set a realistic deadline. Define how you want to be kept informed. Then step back. Resist the urge to micromanage or take the task back at the first sign of imperfection. Delegation that includes constant oversight isn't really delegation.\n\n## 9\\. Manage Your Energy, Not Just Your Time\n\n[Time management](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhow-to-manage-your-time-effectively) is important, but energy management might matter more. You could have a perfectly scheduled day and still be unproductive if you're exhausted, distracted, or depleted. Conversely, you can accomplish remarkable things in limited time when your energy is high.\n\nEnergy isn't just physical. It's also mental (your ability to focus), emotional (your mood and motivation), and even spiritual (your sense of purpose). All four dimensions need attention. Neglecting any one of them eventually undermines the others.\n\nMost people have natural energy rhythms throughout the day—times when they're sharp and times when they're sluggish. For many, this peak is mid-morning; for others, it's late at night. The key is matching your most demanding work to your highest energy periods, and saving routine tasks for when you're naturally lower.\n\nEnergy management basics: [Protect your sleep](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Frevenge-bedtime-procrastination)—this is non-negotiable. Move your body daily. Eat in ways that sustain energy rather than spike and crash it. Take breaks before you're exhausted. Notice your natural energy patterns and schedule accordingly. And pay attention to what drains you versus what energizes you—then adjust your work where possible.\n\n## 10\\. Set Boundaries Around Your Time and Attention\n\nIn a world of constant connectivity, your time and attention are under constant assault. Notifications, messages, emails, requests—everyone and everything wants a piece of your focus. Without [deliberate boundaries](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhow-to-set-and-preserve-boundaries), your day will be shaped by other people's priorities rather than your own.\n\nBoundaries aren't about being unresponsive or unhelpful. They're about being intentional. When you protect time for focused work, you produce better results. When you batch your availability rather than being always-on, you're actually more present when you do engage.\n\nResearch on \"always-on\" work culture shows it decreases productivity, increases burnout, and doesn't even improve responsiveness—because exhausted, scattered workers aren't actually responding well. The illusion of constant availability often comes at the cost of real effectiveness.\n\n**Boundaries to consider:** Designated \"no meeting\" blocks or days. Specific times when you check your email rather than constantly. Notification settings that don't interrupt focus time. Clear communication about when you're available and when you're not. And perhaps most importantly—actually honoring these boundaries rather than treating them as suggestions.\n\n## The Real Secret to Productivity\n\nHere's what productivity gurus often don't tell you: being productive is a practice, not a destination. There's no system that will make you perfectly efficient forever. There's no app that will eliminate procrastination. There's no [morning routine](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Finfluencer-morning-routine) that guarantees a successful day.\n\nReal productivity is about building sustainable habits, being intentional with your time, and continuously adjusting based on what works for you. It's about working in alignment with your energy and attention, not against them. And it's about defining success for yourself—not by how busy you appear, but by whether you're moving meaningful things forward.\n\nStart with one or two strategies from this list. Practice them until they become automatic. Then add another. Small, consistent improvements compound over time into dramatically better results—without the burnout that comes from trying to do everything at once.\n\n## Frequently Asked Questions\n\n### Why can't I focus at work?\n\n![productivity-delegate-tasks.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fproductivity_delegate_tasks_351da5ca49.jpg)\n\nCommon causes include multitasking, constant notifications and interruptions, lack of sleep, unclear priorities, and attempting cognitively demanding work when your energy is low. Try single-tasking, silencing notifications during focus time, and scheduling important work during your peak energy hours.\n\n### How many hours can you actually be productive in a day?\n\nResearch suggests most people can sustain about 4-6 hours of truly focused, cognitively demanding work per day. Beyond that, productivity drops significantly. The goal isn't to maximize hours worked but to maximize the quality of focused hours—and accept that not all work requires peak focus.\n\n### Is multitasking ever effective?\n\nTrue multitasking can work for purely automatic tasks that don't require thought—like listening to music while exercising. But for any cognitively demanding work, multitasking reduces both speed and quality. What feels like efficient multitasking is usually just rapid, costly task-switching.\n\n### How do I stop procrastinating?\n\nProcrastination is often about emotion management, not time management. We avoid tasks that feel boring, difficult, or anxiety-inducing. Strategies that help: break large tasks into smaller, less intimidating pieces; use time-limited sprints (like Pomodoro); start with just 5 minutes to overcome inertia; and address the underlying resistance by asking what specifically you're avoiding.\n\n### What's the best morning routine for productivity?\n\nThere's no universal \"best\" routine—it depends on your life and preferences. However, most productive routines share some elements: not checking email or social media immediately, some form of movement or mindfulness, clarity about the day's priorities, and protecting time for important work before reactive tasks take over.\n\n### How do I stay productive working from home?\n\n[Working from home](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fremote-work-essentials) requires more intentional structure since external cues (commute, office environment) are missing. Create a dedicated workspace, maintain consistent work hours, establish start\u002Fend rituals that signal \"work mode,\" batch communication to avoid constant availability, and take real breaks rather than blurring work and home activities together.\n\n### What's the Pomodoro Technique?\n\nThe Pomodoro Technique involves working in focused 25-minute intervals (called \"pomodoros\") followed by 5-minute breaks. After four pomodoros, take a longer break of 15-30 minutes. It's effective because it makes focused work feel manageable, builds in recovery time, and creates a mild sense of urgency that combats procrastination.\n\n*This post contains affiliate links. When you purchase through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support our blog and allows us to continue creating content you resonate with\\! We always suggest things we’ve tried and already love\\!*\n\n*Last updated: December 2025*\n\n\n\n\n\n","5-proven-ways-to-increase-productivity-in-the-workplace","how to be more productive, increase productivity at work, productivity tips, workplace productivity, time management, productivity strategies, work smarter not harder, productivity hacks","Stop working harder and start working smarter. These 10 research-backed productivity strategies will help you get more done in less time—without burning out.\n",{"id":142,"name":143,"alternativeText":52,"caption":52,"width":53,"height":54,"formats":144,"hash":165,"ext":57,"mime":60,"size":166,"url":167,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":168,"updatedAt":169},149,"productivity-increase-how.jpg",{"large":145,"small":150,"medium":155,"thumbnail":160},{"ext":57,"url":146,"hash":147,"mime":60,"name":148,"path":62,"size":149,"width":64,"height":65},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_productivity_increase_how_46a8ee3db6.jpg","large_productivity_increase_how_46a8ee3db6","large_productivity-increase-how.jpg",83.32,{"ext":57,"url":151,"hash":152,"mime":60,"name":153,"path":62,"size":154,"width":71,"height":72},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_productivity_increase_how_46a8ee3db6.jpg","small_productivity_increase_how_46a8ee3db6","small_productivity-increase-how.jpg",25.2,{"ext":57,"url":156,"hash":157,"mime":60,"name":158,"path":62,"size":159,"width":78,"height":79},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_productivity_increase_how_46a8ee3db6.jpg","medium_productivity_increase_how_46a8ee3db6","medium_productivity-increase-how.jpg",48.95,{"ext":57,"url":161,"hash":162,"mime":60,"name":163,"path":62,"size":164,"width":85,"height":86},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_productivity_increase_how_46a8ee3db6.jpg","thumbnail_productivity_increase_how_46a8ee3db6","thumbnail_productivity-increase-how.jpg",8.08,"productivity_increase_how_46a8ee3db6",187.37,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fproductivity_increase_how_46a8ee3db6.jpg","2021-09-19T13:16:53.400Z","2021-09-19T13:16:53.424Z",{"id":6,"name":7,"slug":8,"createdAt":171,"updatedAt":172,"publishedAt":96},"2020-12-24T19:15:38.145Z","2020-12-24T19:15:38.158Z",{"id":6,"name":174,"slug":175,"instagram":176,"facebook":177,"bio":178,"createdAt":179,"updatedAt":180,"publishedAt":181,"linkedIn":182,"avatar":183},"Dimitra","dimitra","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.instagram.com\u002Fdimdimi\u002F","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.facebook.com\u002Fdimitra.lioliou.9","She worked in corporate, then embraced the freelancer dream and built two businesses. In the meantime, she learned five foreign languages, picked up a Master's in Digital Marketing, and somehow ended up deep in the world of AI Risk Strategy — because understanding people was always the strategy anyway.\nNow she spends her time between Greece and the US, meeting with clients, writing about whatever life brings, and helping businesses figure out what AI gets wrong before it costs them.\nJust a suggestion: don't ask her about languages. She will never stop talking.","2020-12-24T18:56:38.909Z","2026-02-19T19:46:02.745Z","2020-12-24T18:56:43.888Z","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.linkedin.com\u002Fin\u002Fdimitra-lioliou\u002F",{"id":184,"name":185,"alternativeText":186,"caption":187,"width":110,"height":110,"formats":188,"hash":195,"ext":113,"mime":116,"size":196,"url":197,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":198,"updatedAt":198},1244,"Dimitra Lioliou.png","dimitra lioliou profile pic","dimitra lioliou the working gal",{"thumbnail":189},{"ext":113,"url":190,"hash":191,"mime":116,"name":192,"path":62,"size":193,"width":119,"height":119,"sizeInBytes":194},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_Dimitra_Lioliou_4c495e8044.png","thumbnail_Dimitra_Lioliou_4c495e8044","thumbnail_Dimitra Lioliou.png",47.83,47833,"Dimitra_Lioliou_4c495e8044",34.56,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002FDimitra_Lioliou_4c495e8044.png","2025-04-09T22:06:21.464Z","https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Fproductivity_increase_how_46a8ee3db6.jpg",{"id":201,"title":202,"createdAt":203,"updatedAt":204,"publishedAt":205,"content":206,"slug":207,"coffees":14,"seo_title":202,"keywords":208,"seo_desc":209,"featuredImage":210,"category":239,"author":242,"img":266},64,"DIY Hair Masks: 8 Easy Recipes for Every Hair Type (Using Kitchen Ingredients)","2021-09-04T12:56:31.982Z","2025-12-15T05:33:59.652Z","2021-09-06T17:50:34.553Z","Summer sun, sea salt, chlorine, heat styling, coloring—our hair takes a beating. By the time [fall arrives](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Ffall-essentials), many of us are left with strands that feel more like straw than silk. The good news? The solution to damaged, dry, or dull hair might already be sitting in your kitchen.\n\nHomemade hair masks have been used for centuries across cultures—long before the beauty industry convinced us we needed products with 47 unpronounceable ingredients. Eggs, honey, olive oil, avocado, yogurt—these natural ingredients contain proteins, fatty acids, vitamins, and humectants that genuinely nourish hair. And unlike expensive salon treatments, they cost almost nothing.\n\nAfter testing dozens of recipes, we've compiled the ones that actually work—along with the science behind why they work and guidance on which mask suits your specific hair type.\n\n## Why DIY Hair Masks Actually Work\n\nBefore diving into recipes, it helps to understand what makes these ingredients effective:\n\nEggs are rich in protein, which hair is primarily made of (keratin). The proteins in eggs can temporarily fill in gaps in damaged hair cuticles, making strands feel smoother and stronger. Egg yolks also contain fatty acids and [vitamins](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fthis-vitamin-is-what-you-need-for-healthy-and-strong-hair) A, D, and E that nourish the scalp.\n\nOlive oil penetrates the hair shaft more effectively than many other oils due to its molecular structure. It's rich in oleic acid and vitamin E, which moisturize and protect hair from damage. It also helps smooth the cuticle, reducing frizz and adding shine.\n\n![hair-mask-with-olive-oil.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fhair_mask_with_olive_oil_a24a8e0c21.jpg)\n\nHoney is a natural humectant—it draws moisture from the air into your hair. It also contains antioxidants and has natural antibacterial properties that can benefit scalp health. Plus, it helps seal moisture into the hair shaft.\n\nCoconut oil has a unique ability to penetrate the hair shaft and reduce protein loss. [Studies have shown](https:\u002F\u002Fpubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov\u002F12715094\u002F) it's more effective at this than mineral oil or sunflower oil. It's particularly beneficial for preventing damage from grooming and chemical treatments.\n\nAvocado is loaded with healthy fats, vitamins B and E, and natural oils that intensely moisturize dry hair. It also contains biotin, which promotes hair growth and strength.\n\nYogurt contains lactic acid, which gently cleanses the scalp and removes buildup. It also has protein and fat that condition hair, plus probiotics that may support scalp health.\n\nBanana is rich in potassium, natural oils, and vitamins that soften hair and protect its natural elasticity, helping prevent breakage and split ends.\n\n## Know Your Hair Type First\n\nNot all masks work for all hair types. Using the wrong one can leave oily hair greasier or weigh down fine hair. Here's a quick guide:\n\n**Dry or damaged hair:** Look for masks with oils (olive, coconut, avocado), egg yolks, honey, and banana. These provide intense moisture and help repair the hair cuticle.\n\n**Oily hair:** Stick to lighter ingredients like egg whites (protein without fat), yogurt, lemon juice, or apple cider vinegar. Avoid heavy oils or use them only on the ends.\n\n**Fine or limp hair:** Go easy on oils, which can weigh hair down. Egg whites, yogurt, and honey work well. Use smaller quantities and focus on mid-lengths to ends.\n\n**Color-treated hair:** Avoid lemon juice or apple cider vinegar, which can strip color. Opt for moisturizing masks with coconut oil, avocado, or honey to counteract the drying effects of coloring.\n\n**Curly or coily hair:** Embrace the heavier, more moisturizing masks—avocado, coconut oil, banana, and shea butter. Curly hair tends to be drier because natural oils have a harder time traveling down the spiral shape.\n\n## 1\\. Classic Egg and Olive Oil Mask\n\n*Best for: Dry, damaged, or brittle hair*\n\nThis is the workhorse of DIY hair masks—simple, effective, and using ingredients you almost certainly have on hand. The egg provides protein to strengthen hair while olive oil delivers deep moisture.\n\n**Ingredients:**\n\n1 egg (whole egg for normal hair, yolk only for dry hair, white only for oily hair)\n\n2 tablespoons olive oil\n\n1-2 tablespoons cold water to thin the mixture\n\n**Instructions:**\n\nWhisk the egg and olive oil together in a bowl. Add cold water (never hot—it will cook the egg) until you reach a consistency that spreads easily. Apply to damp hair from roots to ends, massaging gently into the scalp. Leave for 15-20 minutes, then rinse thoroughly with lukewarm water and shampoo.\n\n**Pro tip:** Olive oil is stubborn to wash out. Apply a small amount of shampoo to your hair before wetting it for easier removal.\n\n## 2\\. Deep Conditioning Honey, Egg, and Olive Oil Mask\n\n*Best for: Very dry, sun-damaged, or heat-damaged hair*\n\nAdding honey to the classic egg and olive oil mask creates an even more intensely moisturizing treatment. The honey acts as a humectant, drawing additional moisture into the hair shaft.\n\n**Ingredients:**\n\n1 egg (yolk only for extra dry hair)\n\n2 tablespoons olive oil\n\n1 tablespoon raw honey, slightly warmed to make it easier to mix\n\n**Instructions:**\n\nMix all ingredients until smooth. Apply to damp hair, focusing on mid-lengths and ends (the most damaged areas). Cover with a shower cap or plastic wrap, then wrap a warm towel around your head—the heat helps ingredients penetrate. Leave for 20-30 minutes, then rinse with lukewarm water and shampoo twice to remove all residue.\n\n## 3\\. Banana, Yogurt, and Honey Smoothie Mask\n\n![hair-mask-with-yoghurt.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fhair_mask_with_yoghurt_31fe0556df.jpg)\n\n*Best for: Dry, frizzy, or brittle hair that needs softening*\n\nThis mask smells good enough to eat—and it works beautifully on hair that's lost its softness. The banana provides potassium and natural oils, yogurt adds protein and gentle cleansing, and honey seals in moisture.\n\n**Ingredients:**\n\n1 ripe banana (very ripe is best—more sugars and easier to mash)\n\n2 tablespoons plain yogurt (full-fat works best)\n\n1 tablespoon honey\n\nInstructions:\n\nMash the banana thoroughly—and we mean thoroughly. Any chunks will be a nightmare to wash out. Blend in the yogurt and honey until completely smooth. Apply to damp hair, cover with a shower cap, and leave for 15-20 minutes. Rinse very thoroughly; banana can be sticky.\n\n**Pro tip:** Use a blender for a truly smooth consistency. Trust us on this one.\n\n## 4\\. Pure Coconut Oil Deep Treatment\n\n*Best for: Extremely dry, chemically treated, or damaged hair*\n\nSometimes, simple is best. Coconut oil on its own is one of the most effective hair treatments available—scientific studies have confirmed it penetrates the hair shaft better than other oils and significantly reduces protein loss.\n\n**Ingredients:**\n\n2-4 tablespoons virgin coconut oil (depending on hair length and thickness)\n\n**Instructions:**\n\nWarm the coconut oil until just melted (it liquefies at about 24°C\u002F76°F). Apply to dry hair, starting at the ends and working up—be sparing at the roots if you have oily hair. For maximum benefit, leave on for several hours or even overnight (protect your pillow with a towel). Shampoo twice to remove completely.\n\n**Pro tip:** For an overnight treatment, braid your hair after applying the oil to avoid mess and ensure even distribution.\n\n## 5\\. Avocado and Olive Oil Intensive Moisture Mask\n\n*Best for: Very dry, coarse, curly, or coily hair*\n\nAvocado is nature's deep conditioner. Packed with healthy fats, vitamins E and B, and biotin, it delivers intense moisture that's perfect for hair types that need extra hydration.\n\n**Ingredients:**\n\n1 ripe avocado\n\n2 tablespoons olive oil\n\n1 tablespoon honey (optional, for extra moisture)\n\n**Instructions:**\n\nMash the avocado until completely smooth (again, a blender helps). Mix in the olive oil and honey. Apply generously to damp hair, focusing on the driest areas. Cover and leave for 20-30 minutes. Rinse thoroughly and shampoo.\n\n## 6\\. Apple Cider Vinegar Clarifying Rinse\n\n*Best for: Oily hair, product buildup, or dull hair that needs shine*\n\nNot technically a mask, but essential for hair care. Apple cider vinegar removes product buildup, balances scalp pH, and smooths the hair cuticle for incredible shine. Use it after shampooing in place of conditioner, or after a deep conditioning mask.\n\n**Ingredients:**\n\n2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar\n\n1 cup cool water\n\n**Instructions:**\n\nMix vinegar and water in a bottle or jug. After shampooing (and conditioning if you wish), pour the mixture over your hair, working it through from roots to ends. Leave for 1-2 minutes, then rinse with cool water. The vinegar smell disappears once your hair dries.\n\n**Caution:** Don't use on color-treated hair—the acidity can strip color.\n\n## 7\\. Yogurt and Lemon Scalp Treatment\n\n*Best for: Oily scalp, dandruff, or fine hair*\n\nThis lightweight mask is perfect for oily hair that still needs conditioning. The yogurt provides protein and gentle cleansing without heaviness, while lemon juice helps balance oil production and adds shine.\n\n**Ingredients:**\n\n3 tablespoons plain yogurt\n\n1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice\n\n**Instructions:**\n\nMix yogurt and lemon juice until smooth. Apply to damp hair, massaging into the scalp. Leave for 15 minutes, then rinse thoroughly and shampoo lightly. Follow with conditioner on ends only if needed.\n\n**Caution:** Lemon juice can lighten hair slightly with repeated use and sun exposure. Avoid if you have color-treated hair or don't want any lightening effect.\n\n## 8\\. Overnight Repair Mask for Severely Damaged Hair\n\n*Best for: Severely damaged, over-processed, or extremely dry hair*\n\nWhen your hair needs serious rescue, this intensive overnight treatment combines multiple nourishing ingredients for maximum repair.\n\n**Ingredients:**\n\n2 tablespoons coconut oil\n\n1 tablespoon olive oil\n\n1 tablespoon honey\n\n1 egg yolk\n\n**Instructions:**\n\nWarm the oils slightly and mix all ingredients until smooth. Apply to dry hair, concentrating on the most damaged areas (usually mid-lengths and ends). Braid hair loosely, cover with a shower cap, and sleep on a towel-covered pillow. Shampoo thoroughly in the morning—you may need two washes.\n\n![hair-mask-with-honey.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fhair_mask_with_honey_a31d772b10.jpg)\n\n## Tips for Best Results\n\n\\-Start with clean or damp hair. Most masks work best on freshly washed, towel-dried hair. [Product buildup](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fodele-clarifying-shampoo-review) can prevent ingredients from penetrating.\n\n\\-Use heat to boost absorption. Cover your hair with a shower cap, then wrap a warm towel around your head. The heat opens the hair cuticle, allowing ingredients to penetrate more deeply.\n\n\\-Never use hot water with eggs. Hot water will literally cook the egg in your hair, creating a messy, difficult-to-remove situation. Always rinse egg-based masks with lukewarm or cool water.\n\n\\-Adjust quantities for your hair length. The recipes given are for medium-length hair. Double for very long or thick hair; halve for short hair.\n\n\\-Don't overdo it. Using masks too frequently can lead to protein overload (making hair stiff and brittle) or greasiness. Once a week is enough for most people; once every two weeks for oily hair.\n\n\\-Mix fresh each time. These natural ingredients don't contain preservatives. Make only what you'll use immediately.\n\n\\-Be patient. Unlike commercial products designed to coat hair with silicones for instant smoothness, natural masks work more gradually. Give it 3-4 treatments before expecting dramatic results.\n\n## Frequently Asked Questions\n\n### How often should I use a hair mask?\n\nFor most hair types, once a week is ideal. If your hair is very dry or damaged, you can use a moisturizing mask twice a week. If your hair is oily or fine, stick to every 10-14 days to avoid weighing hair down or causing buildup.\n\n### Can I leave a hair mask on overnight?\n\nOil-based masks (coconut oil, olive oil) are safe to leave overnight and can be very effective. However, avoid leaving protein-heavy masks (eggs) on for more than 30 minutes, as too much protein can make hair stiff and brittle. Always cover your hair and protect your pillow.\n\n### Should I apply hair mask to wet or dry hair?\n\nMost masks work best on damp, towel-dried hair—wet enough to help spread the product but not dripping. However, oil-only treatments (like pure coconut oil) can be applied to dry hair for deeper penetration, especially for overnight treatments.\n\n### Why does my hair feel worse after using a hair mask?\n\nThis usually happens for one of three reasons: protein overload (too many protein-rich treatments), not rinsing thoroughly enough (residue weighs hair down), or using the wrong mask for your hair type (heavy oils on already oily hair). Try switching to a lighter mask or clarifying with apple cider vinegar.\n\n### Do DIY hair masks really work as well as salon treatments?\n\nFor basic moisturizing and conditioning, yes—natural ingredients like coconut oil, eggs, and honey have been scientifically shown to benefit hair. However, salon treatments may use specialized ingredients or technologies (like keratin treatments) that DIY masks can't replicate. For regular maintenance, DIY masks are excellent and much more affordable.\n\n### Can hair masks help with hair growth?\n\nHair masks primarily improve the condition of existing hair rather than stimulating new growth. However, by reducing breakage and keeping hair healthy, masks can help you retain length. Some ingredients like coconut oil and castor oil are believed to support scalp health, which may indirectly support healthy [hair growth](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhow-to-grow-your-hair).\n\n### How do I get coconut oil out of my hair?\n\nApply shampoo to your hair before wetting it—the shampoo will bind to the oil better when not diluted by water. Lather and rinse, then shampoo again normally. You may need a third wash for very heavy applications. Using warm (not hot) water also helps dissolve the oil.\n\n\n","easy-and-affordable-homemade-hair-masks","DIY hair mask, homemade hair mask, natural hair mask, hair mask for dry hair, hair mask for damaged hair, egg hair mask, coconut oil hair mask, avocado hair mask, honey hair mask","Transform your hair with these 8 easy DIY hair masks using kitchen ingredients. Recipes for dry, oily, damaged, and color-treated hair—plus the science behind why they work.",{"id":211,"name":212,"alternativeText":52,"caption":52,"width":53,"height":54,"formats":213,"hash":234,"ext":57,"mime":60,"size":235,"url":236,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":237,"updatedAt":238},145,"hair-masks-after-summer.jpg",{"large":214,"small":219,"medium":224,"thumbnail":229},{"ext":57,"url":215,"hash":216,"mime":60,"name":217,"path":62,"size":218,"width":64,"height":65},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_hair_masks_after_summer_d2869bddc3.jpg","large_hair_masks_after_summer_d2869bddc3","large_hair-masks-after-summer.jpg",106.57,{"ext":57,"url":220,"hash":221,"mime":60,"name":222,"path":62,"size":223,"width":71,"height":72},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_hair_masks_after_summer_d2869bddc3.jpg","small_hair_masks_after_summer_d2869bddc3","small_hair-masks-after-summer.jpg",30.05,{"ext":57,"url":225,"hash":226,"mime":60,"name":227,"path":62,"size":228,"width":78,"height":79},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_hair_masks_after_summer_d2869bddc3.jpg","medium_hair_masks_after_summer_d2869bddc3","medium_hair-masks-after-summer.jpg",60.99,{"ext":57,"url":230,"hash":231,"mime":60,"name":232,"path":62,"size":233,"width":85,"height":86},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_hair_masks_after_summer_d2869bddc3.jpg","thumbnail_hair_masks_after_summer_d2869bddc3","thumbnail_hair-masks-after-summer.jpg",9.31,"hair_masks_after_summer_d2869bddc3",240.02,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fhair_masks_after_summer_d2869bddc3.jpg","2021-09-04T12:37:46.686Z","2021-09-04T12:37:46.706Z",{"id":14,"name":15,"slug":16,"createdAt":240,"updatedAt":241,"publishedAt":96},"2020-12-24T19:16:00.904Z","2025-02-19T20:04:41.159Z",{"id":26,"name":243,"slug":244,"instagram":245,"facebook":246,"bio":247,"createdAt":248,"updatedAt":249,"publishedAt":250,"linkedIn":251,"avatar":252},"Tonia","tonia","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.instagram.com\u002Fliolioutonia\u002F","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.facebook.com\u002Ftonia.lioliou","If you could find one person combining physical strength and mental ability it would have her name. Tonia is also a teacher, but she has serious experience in all kinds of jobs. She can do whatever you ask her. She is also a big fan of remote work -and she is not afraid to admit it. This is why she loves writing about it.","2020-12-24T18:57:03.277Z","2022-03-04T12:40:41.173Z","2020-12-24T18:57:04.381Z","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.linkedin.com\u002Fin\u002Ftonia-lioliou-078949202\u002F",{"id":26,"name":253,"alternativeText":254,"caption":254,"width":110,"height":110,"formats":255,"hash":261,"ext":113,"mime":116,"size":262,"url":263,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":264,"updatedAt":265},"the working gal author.png","the working gal author",{"thumbnail":256},{"ext":113,"url":257,"hash":258,"mime":116,"name":259,"path":62,"size":260,"width":119,"height":119},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_tonia_614def26ea.png","thumbnail_tonia_614def26ea","thumbnail_tonia.png",52.63,"tonia_614def26ea",111.31,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Ftonia_614def26ea.png","2020-12-24T18:57:01.136Z","2025-02-22T08:34:14.859Z","https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Fhair_masks_after_summer_d2869bddc3.jpg",{"id":268,"title":269,"createdAt":270,"updatedAt":271,"publishedAt":272,"content":273,"slug":274,"coffees":14,"seo_title":269,"keywords":275,"seo_desc":276,"featuredImage":277,"category":306,"author":307,"img":311},63,"7 DIY Face Masks for Glowing Skin: Natural Recipes That Actually Work","2021-09-01T10:28:16.145Z","2025-10-25T21:36:33.222Z","2021-09-01T10:55:36.950Z","We can all agree that taking care of ourselves is essential—not just for our own wellbeing, but because when we feel good in our skin, we show up better for everyone in our lives. And despite what some people might say, beauty care isn't vanity. It's self-care.\n\nSelf-care isn't just meditation and journaling. It's also taking care of your physical self, treating your skin with the same attention you give your mind. And your face? That's the first thing you see in the mirror every morning. When your skin feels healthy, hydrated, and glowing, you start your day with confidence.\n\nNow, the beauty industry is worth billions of dollars—and for good reason. [Quality skincare products work](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Facne-prone-skin-products). But here's the truth: sometimes what your skin really needs isn't the latest $80 serum. Sometimes it needs simple, natural ingredients without additives, preservatives, or a hefty price tag.\n\nWhether you're on a budget, prefer natural skincare, or just want to try something different, DIY face masks using kitchen ingredients can deliver real results. We've researched, tested (and gotten advice from grandma), and compiled seven effective face mask recipes you can make at home with ingredients you probably already have.\n\nLet's dive into natural face masks that actually work—plus the science behind why these ingredients benefit your skin.\n\n## Why DIY Face Masks Work (The Science)\n\nNow, let's talk about why natural ingredients can be genuinely effective:\n\nNatural ingredients contain active compounds that benefit skin. Honey has antibacterial properties, avocado contains healthy fats that moisturize, oats have anti-inflammatory benefits, and yogurt contains lactic acid (a gentle exfoliant). These aren't just folk remedies—they're backed by dermatological research.\n\nYour skin absorbs nutrients. While your skin's barrier prevents many substances from penetrating deeply, certain compounds in natural ingredients can be absorbed and provide benefits to the outer layers of skin, where most visible improvements happen.\n\nLess is sometimes more. Commercial products often contain fragrances, preservatives, and fillers that can irritate sensitive skin. DIY masks let you control exactly what goes on your face.\n\nThat said, natural doesn't automatically mean better or safer. Some people are allergic to natural ingredients, and DIY masks won't replace targeted treatments for specific skin conditions. But for general skin health, hydration, and that coveted glow? These recipes deliver.\n\n## Before You Start: Important Safety Guidelines\n\n*⚠️ Medical Disclaimer: These DIY face masks are for general skincare purposes only and are not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any medical skin conditions. If you have acne, rosacea, eczema, or other dermatological concerns, consult a dermatologist before trying new skincare treatments.*\n\n**Allergy Test First:** Before applying any mask to your face, test it on the inside of your wrist or elbow. Wait 24 hours. If you experience redness, itching, swelling, or irritation, do not use that mask on your face. This is especially important for ingredients like honey, eggs, or nuts.\n\n### Hygiene Matters:\n\n* Wash your hands before making and applying masks  \n* Use clean bowls and utensils  \n* Don't double-dip—use a clean applicator each time  \n* Remove masks before they dry completely and become difficult to remove\n\n### When to Skip DIY Masks:\n\n* Active breakouts or open wounds  \n* Sunburned skin  \n* After professional treatments (wait 48 hours)  \n* Known allergies to any ingredients\n\nNow, let's get to the recipes\\!\n\n## 1\\. Banana & Honey Glow Mask (For Dull, Tired Skin)\n\nBest for: All skin types, especially dull or tired-looking skin that needs brightening\n\n### Ingredients:\n\n* 1\u002F2 ripe banana  \n* 1 tablespoon raw honey\n\n### Why These Ingredients Work:\n\nBanana is rich in vitamins A, B, and E, which help repair damaged skin and fade dark spots. The potassium in bananas hydrates and moisturizes, while antioxidants fight free radicals that cause premature aging. Basically, bananas are like a multivitamin for your face.\n\nHoney is a humectant, meaning it draws moisture from the air into your skin. It also has natural antibacterial properties that can help prevent breakouts. Raw honey (the unprocessed kind) contains enzymes that gently exfoliate dead skin cells, revealing brighter skin underneath.\n\n### How to Make It:\n\n![banana-face-mask.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fbanana_face_mask_776edbcb90.jpg)\n\n\n1. Mash the banana in a bowl until smooth and lump-free  \n2. Add the honey and mix well until you have a soft, spreadable consistency  \n3. If the mixture is too thick, add a tiny bit of water; if too runny, add more mashed banana\n\n### Application:\n\n1. Apply an even layer to clean, dry skin, avoiding the eye area  \n2. Leave on for 15-20 minutes (relax, scroll through your phone, or catch up on a podcast)  \n3. Rinse with lukewarm water, then finish with cool water to close pores  \n4. Pat dry gently with a clean towel\n\nPro tip: This mask works beautifully in the morning before makeup application—your skin will have a natural glow that makes foundation look better.\n\nFrequency: 2-3 times per week\n\n## 2\\. Oatmeal, Yogurt & Honey Calming Mask (For Sensitive or Irritated Skin)\n\nBest for: Sensitive, irritated, or inflamed skin; also great after sun exposure\n\n### Ingredients:\n\n* 2 tablespoons ground oats (blend regular oats into a powder)  \n* 2 tablespoons warm water  \n* 2 tablespoons plain yogurt (Greek or regular)  \n* 1 tablespoon honey  \n* 1 egg white\n\n### Why These Ingredients Work:\n\nOats are incredibly soothing for irritated skin. They contain avenanthramides, anti-inflammatory compounds that reduce itching and redness. Colloidal oatmeal (finely ground) has been used in dermatology for decades to treat eczema and sensitive skin conditions.\n\nYogurt contains lactic acid, a gentle alpha-hydroxy acid (AHA) that exfoliates dead skin cells without harsh scrubbing. It also contains probiotics that may support skin's natural microbiome. The cooling effect feels amazing on irritated skin.\n\nEgg white tightens pores temporarily and absorbs excess oil. It's also rich in protein, which helps repair skin.\n\n### How to Make It:\n\n1. Soak the ground oats in warm water for 2-3 minutes until they absorb the liquid  \n2. Add yogurt, honey, and egg white to the oat mixture  \n3. Mix thoroughly until you have a thick paste (should be spreadable but not runny)\n\n### Application:\n\n1. Apply a medium-thick layer to clean skin, massaging gently in circular motions as you apply  \n2. Avoid the delicate eye area  \n3. Leave on for 10-15 minutes (don't let it dry completely—oat masks work better when kept slightly damp)  \n4. Rinse with warm water, using gentle circular motions to lightly exfoliate  \n5. Finish with cool water and pat dry\n\nPro tip: This is the perfect \"Sunday reset\" mask after a week of makeup, pollution, and stress. Your skin will feel instantly calmer.\n\nFrequency: 1-2 times per week (more if your skin is particularly irritated)\n\n## 3\\. Avocado & Yogurt Hydration Mask (For Dry or Dehydrated Skin)\n\nBest for: Dry, flaky, or dehydrated skin; perfect for winter months\n\n### Ingredients:\n\n* 1\u002F2 ripe avocado  \n* 2 tablespoons plain yogurt\n\n### Why These Ingredients Work:\n\nAvocado is basically nature's moisturizer. It's packed with healthy fats (omega-3 fatty acids) that deeply nourish skin, plus vitamins E and C that protect against environmental damage. The oils in avocado are similar to your skin's natural sebum, so they're easily absorbed. If your skin feels tight and uncomfortable, this is your mask.\n\nYogurt (we love this ingredient\\!) adds lactic acid for gentle exfoliation plus probiotics that may support healthy skin. The combination of fat from avocado and acid from yogurt creates perfectly balanced hydration without greasiness.\n\n### How to Make It:\n![oats-face-mask.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Foats_face_mask_f475bcc9d8.jpg)\n\n1. Mash the avocado thoroughly in a bowl until completely smooth (no chunks\\!)  \n2. Add yogurt and mix well until you have a uniform, creamy consistency  \n3. The mixture should be thick enough to stay on your face but smooth enough to spread easily\n\n### Application:\n\n1. Apply a generous layer to clean skin, including around (but not directly on) your eyes—the eye area gets dry too\\!  \n2. Leave on for 15-20 minutes while you relax  \n3. Rinse with lukewarm water  \n4. Pat dry and immediately apply your regular moisturizer while skin is still slightly damp to lock in hydration\n\nPro tip: Use this mask before special events when you want your skin to look extra plump and glowing. It's also perfect before applying makeup.\n\nFrequency: 2-3 times per week, or whenever your skin feels dry\n\n## 4\\. Turmeric & Yogurt Brightening Mask (For Uneven Skin Tone)\n\nBest for: Dull skin, dark spots, hyperpigmentation, or uneven skin tone\n\n### Ingredients:\n\n* 1 teaspoon turmeric powder (use sparingly\\!)  \n* 2 tablespoons plain yogurt  \n* 1 teaspoon honey  \n* Few drops of lemon juice (optional, skip if you have sensitive skin)\n\n### Why These Ingredients Work:\n\nTurmeric contains curcumin, a powerful anti-inflammatory and antioxidant compound. Studies show it can help fade dark spots, reduce hyperpigmentation, and give skin an overall brighter appearance. It's been used in Indian beauty rituals for thousands of years for good reason.\n\n*⚠️ **Warning**: Turmeric can temporarily stain your skin yellow (especially if you're fair-skinned). The yogurt helps minimize staining, but test this mask on a weekend when you're staying home, just in case.*\n\n### How to Make It:\n\n1. Mix turmeric powder with yogurt in a bowl  \n2. Add honey and lemon juice (if using)  \n3. Mix until smooth—the mixture will be bright yellow\n\n### Application:\n\n1. Apply to clean skin, focusing on areas with dark spots or uneven tone  \n2. Leave on for only 10 minutes (turmeric is potent\\!)  \n3. Rinse thoroughly with lukewarm water  \n4. If you notice any yellow tint, gently exfoliate with a wet washcloth and your regular cleanser\n\nDo this mask at night so any temporary yellowing fades by morning. Also, wear an old shirt—turmeric stains fabric\\!\n\nFrequency: Once per week maximum (turmeric is strong)\n\n## 5\\. Strawberry & Honey Exfoliating Mask (For Gentle Exfoliation)\n\nBest for: Combination or oily skin; anyone wanting gentle exfoliation and brightening\n\n### Ingredients:\n\n* 3-4 ripe strawberries  \n* 1 tablespoon honey  \n* 1 teaspoon lemon juice (optional)\n\n### Why These Ingredients Work:\n\nStrawberries contain salicylic acid (the same ingredient in many acne treatments) plus vitamin C for brightening. The natural seeds provide very gentle physical exfoliation. They also contain ellagic acid, which protects skin from UV damage.\n\nThis mask smells absolutely amazing, which is an underrated benefit of DIY skincare\\!\n\n### How to Make It:\n\n1. Mash strawberries thoroughly  \n2. Add honey and lemon juice  \n3. Mix until combined (some texture from seeds is fine)\n\n### Application:\n\n1. Apply to clean skin, gently massaging in circular motions  \n2. Leave on for 10-15 minutes  \n3. Rinse with lukewarm water, using gentle circular motions to exfoliate  \n4. Pat dry\n\nPro tip: Make this mask in summer when strawberries are in season and at their most potent. Your skin will thank you\\!\n\nFrequency: 1-2 times per week\n\n## 6\\. Cucumber & Aloe Cooling Mask (For Puffy or Stressed Skin)\n\nBest for: Puffy skin, stressed or tired-looking skin, or after sun exposure\n\n### Ingredients:\n\n* 1\u002F2 cucumber, blended or grated  \n* 2 tablespoons aloe vera gel (pure, without added ingredients)  \n* 1 tablespoon yogurt\n\n### Why These Ingredients Work:\n\nCucumber is incredibly hydrating (it's 96% water\\!) and has a natural cooling effect that reduces puffiness. It contains vitamin C and caffeic acid, which soothe irritated skin and reduce swelling.\n\nAloe vera has been used for skin healing for centuries. It contains vitamins, minerals, and amino acids that hydrate and calm skin. It's especially soothing for irritated or sunburned skin.\n\n### How to Make It:\n\n1. Blend or finely grate the cucumber  \n2. Squeeze out excess liquid (you want the pulp, not just juice)  \n3. Mix with aloe vera gel and yogurt\n\n### Application:\n\n1. Apply a generous layer to clean skin  \n2. Place cucumber slices over your eyes while you wait (classic spa move\\!)  \n3. Leave on for 15-20 minutes  \n4. Rinse with cool water  \n5. Pat dry\n\nMake this mask in the morning when you're puffy from sleep or after a long flight. It's incredibly refreshing and de-puffing.\n\nFrequency: As needed, up to 3 times per week\n\n## 7\\. Clay & Apple Cider Vinegar Detox Mask (For Oily or Congested Skin)\n\nBest for: Oily, acne-prone, or congested skin with visible pores\n\n### Ingredients:\n\n* 1 tablespoon bentonite or kaolin clay (available at health food stores)  \n* 1-2 teaspoons apple cider vinegar  \n* Water as needed to achieve paste consistency\n\n### Why These Ingredients Work:\n\nClay acts like a magnet for impurities, drawing out excess oil, dirt, and toxins from pores. Bentonite clay has a negative electrical charge that attracts positively charged toxins. It's one of the most effective natural pore-cleansers available.\n\nApple cider vinegar contains acetic acid and alpha-hydroxy acids that gently exfoliate and help balance skin's pH. It also has antibacterial properties that can help prevent breakouts.\n\n### How to Make It:\n\n1. Mix clay with apple cider vinegar in a non-metal bowl (metal can affect clay's properties)  \n2. Add water gradually until you reach a spreadable paste  \n3. Use immediately—clay dries out quickly\n\n### Application:\n\n1. Apply to clean skin, focusing on oily areas like T-zone  \n2. Leave on for 10-15 minutes (will feel tight as it dries—that's normal\\!)  \n3. Important: Don't let the mask dry completely—it should stay slightly damp  \n4. Rinse thoroughly with warm water  \n5. Follow immediately with moisturizer (clay is drying)\n\nPro tip: This is your \"detox\" mask for after a week of stress, poor sleep, or eating habits that made your skin act up. Just once weekly can make a huge difference in congestion.\n\nFrequency: Once per week (clay masks are drying—don't overdo it)\n\n## How to Get the Most from Your DIY Face Masks\n\n### Prep Your Skin:\n\nAlways start with clean skin. Remove all makeup, wash with your regular cleanser, and pat dry. Masks work best on clean skin because ingredients can actually penetrate.\n\nOptional but recommended: Exfoliate gently before applying a mask. This removes dead skin cells so the mask's active ingredients can work better. Skip this step if you're using an exfoliating mask (like the strawberry one).\n\nSteam your face (optional): Hold your face over a bowl of hot water with a towel over your head for 3-5 minutes. The steam opens pores, allowing masks to work more deeply. Especially good before clay masks.\n\n### After Your Mask:\n\n1. Rinse thoroughly \\- Don't leave any residue  \n2. Apply toner \\- Restores pH balance  \n3. Moisturize immediately \\- Lock in the benefits while skin is damp  \n4. Use SPF \\- If it's daytime (some ingredients like lemon can increase sun sensitivity)\n\n### Storage Tips:\n\nMost DIY masks should be used immediately. However, if you have leftovers:\n\n* Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator  \n* Use within 24-48 hours max  \n* If it smells off or changes color, throw it out  \n* Don't store masks containing raw eggs for more than a few hours\n\nMake-ahead tip: Mix dry ingredients (like oats and clay) in advance and store in a jar. When you're ready, just add wet ingredients. This saves time on busy mornings.\n\n## Creating Your Weekly Face Mask Routine\n\nYou don't need to use all seven masks\\! Here's how to build a routine based on your skin type:\n\n### For Dry Skin:\n\n* Monday: Avocado & Yogurt (hydration)  \n* Thursday: Banana & Honey (glow boost)  \n* Sunday: Cucumber & Aloe (soothing)\n\n### For Oily Skin:\n\n* Tuesday: Clay & ACV (deep clean)  \n* Friday: Strawberry & Honey (gentle exfoliation)  \n* Sunday: Oatmeal blend (calming)\n\n![face-mask-home.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fface_mask_home_e04fb126e1.jpg)\n\n### For Combination Skin:\n\n* Use clay mask only on oily areas (T-zone)  \n* Use hydrating masks on dry areas (cheeks)  \n* Or alternate masks throughout the week\n\n### For Sensitive Skin:\n\n* Stick to the oatmeal and cucumber masks  \n* Avoid lemon juice and turmeric  \n* Always patch test first\n\n## Natural Skincare That Actually Works\n\nDIY face masks won't replace your entire skincare routine—you still need cleanser, [moisturizer](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-best-moisturizers-of-2024-and-2025), and SPF. But they're an excellent (and affordable) way to give your skin extra love and address specific concerns naturally.\n\nThe best part? You control exactly what goes on your face. No mystery ingredients, no harsh chemicals, no $50 price tag. Just simple, effective, natural skincare that's been working for generations.\n\nYour skin deserves care—and that care doesn't have to be complicated or expensive. Sometimes the best solutions are already in your kitchen, waiting to help your skin glow.\n\n## Frequently Asked Questions About DIY Face Masks\n\n### How often should I use DIY face masks?\n\nThe ideal frequency depends on the type of mask and your skin type. Generally, hydrating masks (banana-honey, avocado-yogurt, cucumber-aloe) can be used 2-3 times per week. Exfoliating or brightening masks (strawberry, turmeric) should be limited to once or twice weekly. Clay masks for oily skin work best once per week. Listen to your skin—if it feels irritated or dry, reduce frequency. Consistency matters more than frequency; using a mask once weekly for months will show better results than using it daily for a week.\n\n### Can I use DIY face masks if I have acne?\n\nYes, but choose wisely. Honey-based masks have antibacterial properties that can help with acne, and clay masks effectively absorb excess oil. However, avoid masks with comedogenic ingredients like coconut oil if you're acne-prone. The oatmeal-yogurt mask is excellent for calming inflamed acne, and turmeric can help fade post-acne dark spots. Never apply masks to active, open breakouts or cystic acne. If you have severe acne, consult a dermatologist before trying new treatments—DIY masks complement but don't replace professional acne care.\n\n### Are natural face masks better than store-bought products?\n\nNot necessarily better, just different. Natural masks offer transparency (you know exactly what's in them), affordability, and can be customized to your needs. However, commercial products offer consistent formulations, longer shelf life, higher concentrations of active ingredients, and undergo safety testing. The best approach is often both: use quality commercial products for your daily routine and supplement with DIY masks for special treatments. Natural doesn't automatically mean better or safer—some people are more allergic to natural ingredients than synthetic ones.\n\n### How long can I store homemade face masks?\n\nMost DIY face masks should be used immediately after preparation. If you must store them, keep them in an airtight container in the refrigerator for a maximum of 24-48 hours. Masks containing raw eggs should be discarded after a few hours due to bacteria risk. Masks with fresh fruit spoil quickly. If your mask smells off, changes color, or develops mold, throw it away immediately. For convenience, you can pre-mix dry ingredients (oats, clay, turmeric powder) and store them for months, then add fresh wet ingredients when ready to use.\n\n### Can DIY face masks help with anti-aging?\n\nDIY masks can support overall skin health, which contributes to a more youthful appearance, but they won't replace targeted anti-aging treatments like retinoids or professional procedures. However, ingredients like avocado (vitamin E), honey (antioxidants), and yogurt (lactic acid for gentle exfoliation) can improve skin texture, hydration, and brightness—all of which make skin look more youthful. The turmeric mask can fade age spots, and consistent hydration from masks plumps fine lines temporarily. For significant anti-aging results, combine DIY masks with a solid skincare routine including SPF, [retinoids](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhow-to-use-retinol-on-your-skin-for-best-results), and vitamin C.\n\n**Safety Reminder:** These DIY face masks are for cosmetic purposes only. They are not intended to treat medical skin conditions. If you have concerns about your skin, consult a dermatologist. Always patch test new ingredients before applying them to your face.\n\n\n\n\n","face-care-the-top-3-face-masks-to-try-at-home","DIY face masks, homemade face masks, natural face masks, face masks at home, homemade face masks for dry skin, easy face masks at home   ","Discover 7 DIY face masks using natural ingredients you already have. From hydrating avocado to brightening turmeric, these homemade skincare recipes actually work for glowing, healthy skin.",{"id":278,"name":279,"alternativeText":52,"caption":52,"width":53,"height":54,"formats":280,"hash":301,"ext":57,"mime":60,"size":302,"url":303,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":304,"updatedAt":305},135,"face-masks-beauty.jpg",{"large":281,"small":286,"medium":291,"thumbnail":296},{"ext":57,"url":282,"hash":283,"mime":60,"name":284,"path":62,"size":285,"width":64,"height":65},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_face_masks_beauty_18a78f708c.jpg","large_face_masks_beauty_18a78f708c","large_face-masks-beauty.jpg",62.01,{"ext":57,"url":287,"hash":288,"mime":60,"name":289,"path":62,"size":290,"width":71,"height":72},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_face_masks_beauty_18a78f708c.jpg","small_face_masks_beauty_18a78f708c","small_face-masks-beauty.jpg",19.77,{"ext":57,"url":292,"hash":293,"mime":60,"name":294,"path":62,"size":295,"width":78,"height":79},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_face_masks_beauty_18a78f708c.jpg","medium_face_masks_beauty_18a78f708c","medium_face-masks-beauty.jpg",37.4,{"ext":57,"url":297,"hash":298,"mime":60,"name":299,"path":62,"size":300,"width":85,"height":86},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_face_masks_beauty_18a78f708c.jpg","thumbnail_face_masks_beauty_18a78f708c","thumbnail_face-masks-beauty.jpg",6.79,"face_masks_beauty_18a78f708c",130.72,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fface_masks_beauty_18a78f708c.jpg","2021-09-01T10:11:50.028Z","2021-09-01T10:11:50.040Z",{"id":14,"name":15,"slug":16,"createdAt":240,"updatedAt":241,"publishedAt":96},{"id":26,"name":243,"slug":244,"instagram":245,"facebook":246,"bio":247,"createdAt":248,"updatedAt":249,"publishedAt":250,"linkedIn":251,"avatar":308},{"id":26,"name":253,"alternativeText":254,"caption":254,"width":110,"height":110,"formats":309,"hash":261,"ext":113,"mime":116,"size":262,"url":263,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":264,"updatedAt":265},{"thumbnail":310},{"ext":113,"url":257,"hash":258,"mime":116,"name":259,"path":62,"size":260,"width":119,"height":119},"https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Fface_masks_beauty_18a78f708c.jpg",{"id":313,"title":314,"createdAt":315,"updatedAt":316,"publishedAt":317,"content":318,"slug":319,"coffees":14,"seo_title":320,"keywords":321,"seo_desc":322,"featuredImage":323,"category":352,"author":355,"img":377},62,"Rosalind Franklin: The Woman Who Discovered DNA and Never Got the Credit","2021-08-31T20:40:25.026Z","2026-02-19T22:26:35.551Z","2021-08-31T20:40:32.494Z","The standard Rosalind Franklin story goes like this: brilliant scientist, stolen work, premature death, belated recognition. It is an accurate summary. It is also not particularly useful, because it frames what happened as an anomaly — as the wrongdoing of a few specific men in a specific decade — rather than as a case study in how institutions actually function when a woman's work produces something valuable.\n\nThe second reading is more accurate. And, for anyone working in a professional environment today, considerably more informative.\n\n## What Rosalind Franklin Actually Did\n\nThis part is worth being precise about, because the popular version tends toward vagueness.\n\nFranklin was a physical chemist who specialised in X-ray crystallography — a technique that uses X-ray beams to determine the structural arrangement of atoms within a molecule. She completed her doctoral dissertation on the microstructure of coal and came to King's College London in 1951 specifically to apply this technique to the structure of DNA, which was then the most pressing open question in molecular biology.\n\nOver the following year, she produced what became known as Photo 51 — an X-ray diffraction image of the B-form of DNA, taken in May 1952\\. It was the sharpest, most structurally revealing image of DNA ever captured at that point. From it, Franklin derived measurements that confirmed the helical structure of the molecule, calculated its dimensions, and identified the location of the phosphate backbone on the outside of the helix.\n\nThese were not supporting observations; they were the central structural data that made the correct DNA model possible.\n\nIn January 1953, without Franklin's knowledge or consent, her colleague Maurice Wilkins showed Photo 51 to James Watson. Watson's own account describes the moment: his pulse raced, he immediately understood the significance of what he was seeing, and he left to draw the helix and share it with Crick. Franklin's unpublished research report — also obtained without her knowledge — provided Watson and Crick with the precise measurements they needed to build a working model. \n\nTheir paper was published in Nature in April 1953\\. Franklin's paper appeared in the same issue, placed third, framed as supporting evidence for the model that had been built using her data.\n\nShe was 33 years old and she had no idea this sequence of events had occurred.\n\n## The Institutional Mechanism — Not the Personal Failing\n\nWhat made the redistribution of Franklin's work possible was not solely the character of the men involved, though character is relevant. It was a series of institutional structures that operated exactly as designed.\n\n### The informal information network.\nWatson and Crick were not working in isolation. They were embedded in a scientific community in which findings were discussed informally before publication — at conferences, over lunch, in correspondence. This network was not equally accessible to all researchers, and Franklin, who was already navigating a [hostile working environment](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F5-toxic-phrases-used-by-colleagues-with-a-huge-ego) at King's College and who had a notably formal professional style compared to her peers, was less embedded in this informal exchange than her male counterparts. Her data moved through the network; she did not.\n\n### The hierarchy of credit in collaborative environments.   \nThe convention that a paper's first authors receive the credit, regardless of the intellectual foundation underneath the work, was not a new rule invented to disadvantage Franklin. It was standard academic practice. The structural problem is that standard academic practice was developed in [environments that were almost exclusively male](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fwomen-in-male-dominated-industries), where the question of a woman's foundational contribution was rarely relevant because women were rarely present.\n\n### The institutional management of inconvenient relationships.\n\n![rosalind-franklin_2.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Frosalind_franklin_2_71264a0d9a.jpg)\n\nWhen the working relationship between Franklin and Wilkins deteriorated — which it did rapidly, due in part to a miscommunication at the time of her appointment that left the question of who was leading the DNA research genuinely ambiguous — the institutional response was to reassign Franklin to a different research project. She was moved from DNA to tobacco mosaic virus research, which turned out to be important and productive work. But the reassignment also removed her from the competition at the precise moment when that competition was reaching its conclusion.\n\nNone of these three mechanisms required anyone to decide, explicitly, that Franklin's credit would be redistributed. They did not require bad faith. They required only that institutions operated as they normally operated — which is to say, in ways that consistently advantaged people who were already advantaged.\n\n## What She Built After\n\nThis is the part of the Franklin story that receives the least attention, and it is worth correcting that omission.\n\nFrom 1953 until her death in 1958, Franklin led a research group at Birkbeck College that produced significant work on the structure of viruses. Her group made critical contributions to the understanding of tobacco mosaic virus, and she was working on the structure of the polio virus when she became ill. The work was foundational enough that her collaborator Aaron Klug received the 1982 Nobel Prize in Chemistry partly for work that built directly on hers. Klug stated explicitly that had Franklin lived, they would have shared the award.\n\nThis period of her career matters because it demonstrates something important: Franklin was not defined by what had been done to her at King's College. She built a laboratory, led a team, produced consequential science, and was recognized for it within her field during her lifetime. She died of ovarian cancer at 37, almost certainly caused by her extensive exposure to X-rays, an occupational hazard that was not well understood at the time.\n\nShe had, in other words, a full and productive scientific career that the biographical shorthand — \"stolen work, no credit\" — consistently obscures.\n\n## The Nobel Question\n\nThe Nobel Prize is not awarded posthumously. This is a rule, not an oversight. When Watson, Crick, and Wilkins received the 1962 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Franklin had been dead for four years. The rules of the prize meant she could not have been included regardless of any other consideration.\n\nThis is not a justification of the broader sequence of events. It is a structural clarification that matters, because conflating \"she didn't receive the Nobel Prize\" with \"they decided not to give her the Nobel Prize\" misrepresents what actually happened. The prize was given four years after her death to the men whose published paper — built substantially on her unpublished data — was the work the committee recognized.\n\nThe question the Nobel Prize raises is not whether Franklin should have received it in 1962\\. The question is what would have happened had she lived — whether the structure of credit that had already been established in 1953 would have been revisited, and whether institutions reliably revisit credit structures once they have been formalised.\n\nThe evidence from comparable cases is not encouraging. But that is a different, and harder, question.\n\n## What This Means for Working Women Now\n\nThe Franklin case is not ancient history that has since been resolved. The specific mechanisms that operated in 1952 and 1953 — the informal information networks that distribute access unevenly, the attribution conventions that formalise first-mover advantage, the institutional management of [professional conflict](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhow-to-avoid-conflicts-at-work-1) that removes the complicating party — are identifiable in professional environments today. They do not require [explicit discrimination](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fruth-bader-ginsburg-inspiration) to function. They require only that default processes continue to operate as defaults.\n\nThe practical read for women working in any institutional setting is this: understand how credit is formalised in your environment before you need to fight for it. The question is not only \"who gets recognized for this work\" but \"at what point, and through what mechanism, does attribution get locked in?\" Franklin's data was shared informally before any formal attribution process had occurred. By the time the Nature papers were published, the credit structure was set.\n\nThis is not an argument for paranoia or for withholding collaboration. It is an argument for understanding the rules of the environment you're operating in — including the unwritten ones — well enough to navigate them with your eyes open.\n\nFranklin did rigorous science in an environment that was not designed to acknowledge it. The work spoke clearly enough that it eventually could not be ignored. But \"eventually\" arrived, in her case, too late.\n\n## The Inside Scoop: Rosalind Franklin\n\n### What did Rosalind Franklin actually discover?\nFranklin produced the key X-ray crystallographic evidence that established the helical structure of DNA, including Photo 51 — the most precise DNA image captured at that time. She also derived critical measurements that confirmed the structure of the molecule. This data was central to the model published by Watson and Crick in 1953\\.\n\n### Why didn't Rosalind Franklin win the Nobel Prize?\nThe Nobel Prize is not awarded posthumously. Franklin died in 1958 of ovarian cancer, four years before Watson, Crick, and Wilkins received the 1962 Nobel Prize. Had she lived, the question of whether she would have shared the recognition is a separate and more contested one.\n\n### What is Photo 51?\nPhoto 51 is an X-ray diffraction image of DNA produced by Rosalind Franklin and her graduate student Raymond Gosling in May 1952\\. It provided the clearest structural evidence of DNA's helical form and was shown to James Watson without Franklin's knowledge, significantly contributing to the Watson-Crick model.\n\n### Was Rosalind Franklin's work stolen?  \nHer unpublished data and Photo 51 were accessed and used by Watson and Crick without her knowledge or consent. Whether this constitutes theft depends on the standards applied — academic conventions of the time did not clearly prohibit it, which is itself part of the structural problem. What is not in dispute is that her data was used without credit, and that she was unaware of how foundational it had been to the 1953 paper until much later.\n\n### Did Rosalind Franklin receive any recognition during her lifetime?\nYes. Franklin's work at Birkbeck College on virus structure was recognised within her field. She presented at conferences, published significant findings, and was respected as a scientist in the viral research community. The narrative that she died unrecognised is incomplete.\n\n## The Structural Takeaway\n\nRosalind Franklin is not primarily useful as a symbol of injustice. She is useful as a precise case study in how institutions process inconvenient people and how the structures that govern credit, access, and attribution can operate to predictable effect without requiring anyone to make an explicit decision.\n\nUnderstanding the case clearly — not as tragedy, but as mechanism — is more respectful of her intelligence than mourning her fate. She was a scientist. She would, presumably, prefer the analysis.\n\n\n\n### Bibliography\n1.\tBenderly BL (2018). Rosalind Franklin and the damage of gender harassment. Science. https:\u002F\u002Fwww.sciencemag.org\u002Fcareers\u002F2018\u002F08\u002Frosalind-franklin-and-damage-gender-harassment\n2.\tElliot E. (2016). Women is science: Remembering Rosalind Franklin. The Jackson Laboratory. https:\u002F\u002Fwww.jax.org\u002Fnews-and-insights\u002Fjax-blog\u002F2016\u002Fjuly\u002Fwomen-in-science-rosalind-franklin#\n3.\tElkin L. (2003). Rosalind Franklin and the double helix. Physics today, 55(3), 42. https:\u002F\u002Fdoi.org\u002F10.1063\u002F1.1570771\n4.\tMaddox, B. The double helix and the 'injured heroine'. Nature 421, 407–408 (2003). https:\u002F\u002Fdoi.org\u002F10.1038\u002Fnature01399 \n\n","rosalind-franklin-the-scientist-behind-2-nobel-prizes","Rosalind Franklin: Did She Win a Nobel Prize? The Scientist Behind 2 Nobel Prizes","did rosalind franklin win a nobel prize, rosalind franklin, rosalind franklin nobel prize, what awards did rosalind franklin win, did rosalind franklin win any awards","Rosalind Franklin's work built the foundation of modern genetics. What happened next reveals how institutions actually handle inconvenient women. Read the analysis.\n",{"id":324,"name":325,"alternativeText":52,"caption":52,"width":53,"height":54,"formats":326,"hash":347,"ext":57,"mime":60,"size":348,"url":349,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":350,"updatedAt":351},133,"rosalind_franklin_1.jpg",{"large":327,"small":332,"medium":337,"thumbnail":342},{"ext":57,"url":328,"hash":329,"mime":60,"name":330,"path":62,"size":331,"width":64,"height":65},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_rosalind_franklin_1_6755e1f1bc.jpg","large_rosalind_franklin_1_6755e1f1bc","large_rosalind_franklin_1.jpg",57.45,{"ext":57,"url":333,"hash":334,"mime":60,"name":335,"path":62,"size":336,"width":71,"height":72},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_rosalind_franklin_1_6755e1f1bc.jpg","small_rosalind_franklin_1_6755e1f1bc","small_rosalind_franklin_1.jpg",19.68,{"ext":57,"url":338,"hash":339,"mime":60,"name":340,"path":62,"size":341,"width":78,"height":79},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_rosalind_franklin_1_6755e1f1bc.jpg","medium_rosalind_franklin_1_6755e1f1bc","medium_rosalind_franklin_1.jpg",36.62,{"ext":57,"url":343,"hash":344,"mime":60,"name":345,"path":62,"size":346,"width":85,"height":86},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_rosalind_franklin_1_6755e1f1bc.jpg","thumbnail_rosalind_franklin_1_6755e1f1bc","thumbnail_rosalind_franklin_1.jpg",5.89,"rosalind_franklin_1_6755e1f1bc",107.59,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Frosalind_franklin_1_6755e1f1bc.jpg","2021-08-31T20:37:09.632Z","2021-08-31T20:37:09.646Z",{"id":22,"name":23,"slug":24,"createdAt":353,"updatedAt":354,"publishedAt":96},"2020-12-24T19:16:11.810Z","2025-10-01T19:49:12.086Z",{"id":30,"name":356,"slug":357,"instagram":358,"facebook":62,"bio":359,"createdAt":360,"updatedAt":361,"publishedAt":362,"linkedIn":62,"avatar":363},"Aphrodite","aphrodite","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.instagram.com\u002Fafroditi_mlr\u002F","Aphrodite: Our “conscious” Gal! If you want to talk about politics, philosophy, even… immunology, she is the one! She is the biologist of the team, she loves research in every single domain and sector, and if there is one thing we can say about her is that “curiosity didn’t eventually kill the cat… it offered it 7 lives more”. ","2021-08-31T19:47:46.012Z","2021-08-31T19:54:09.391Z","2021-08-31T19:52:11.659Z",{"id":364,"name":365,"alternativeText":52,"caption":52,"width":110,"height":110,"formats":366,"hash":372,"ext":57,"mime":60,"size":373,"url":374,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":375,"updatedAt":376},132,"aphrodite photo.jpg",{"thumbnail":367},{"ext":57,"url":368,"hash":369,"mime":60,"name":370,"path":62,"size":371,"width":119,"height":119},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_aphrodite_photo_23f2152202.jpg","thumbnail_aphrodite_photo_23f2152202","thumbnail_aphrodite photo.jpg",6.48,"aphrodite_photo_23f2152202",14.57,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Faphrodite_photo_23f2152202.jpg","2021-08-31T19:51:38.319Z","2021-08-31T19:51:38.331Z","https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Frosalind_franklin_1_6755e1f1bc.jpg",{"id":379,"title":380,"createdAt":381,"updatedAt":382,"publishedAt":383,"content":384,"slug":385,"coffees":14,"seo_title":380,"keywords":386,"seo_desc":387,"featuredImage":388,"category":417,"author":418,"img":440},61,"Research: Can Women Work with Other Women?","2021-08-20T18:31:56.700Z","2025-10-23T23:57:42.834Z","2021-08-20T18:32:16.010Z","### Many of us have been wondering whether women can or want to work with other women. \n\nIt is very common to hear that women don’t want to cooperate with other women, and many studies confirm that.\nA Pew survey is so *devastating*, considering that more women than men don’t prefer to work with women. Pew asked 2,002 people if they would prefer to work with men or women. Most—78 percent of men and 76 percent of women—said **they didn’t care**. But for the 22 percent who did have a preference, *“it’s men who get the nod from both sexes by about a 2-1 margin,”* Pew’s Rich Morin writes. In fact, more women said they’d rather work with men than men did. \n\nWhen the results are broken down by generation, workers who were born between 1925 and 1942 were most likely to say they *prefer working with men* (21 percent), and Millennials (born in the 1980s and 1990s) were least likely to (11 percent). But from there, the percentage doesn’t track with age. In fact, more workers from Generation X, who are closer in age to Millennials, said they’d prefer to work with men (19 percent) than did the middle-aged Boomers (16 percent).\n\nMoreover, **Millennial women** than men (59 percent versus 19 percent) said being a working parent makes it hard to advance in a job, and fewer Millennial women said they aspired to become managers.\n\nThere are several opinions about how women feel working with other women. Many studies (Pew and Gallup) indicate that women face difficulty having female partners and prefer working for or with men than women. Women are afraid of the judgmental attitude that women have against subordinates. A 2009 study published in the journal *Gender in Management* found, for example, that although women believe other women make good managers, “the female workers did not actually want to work for them.” Although women had been in the workplace, they don’t want to have a female boss.\n\n**Joyce Benenson**, a psychologist in Emmanuel College of Boston, believes that *it is in the nature of women not to cooperate with other females*. Her research indicates that women and girls are **less willing** than men and boys to cooperate with lower-status individuals of the same gender; more likely to dissolve same-gender friendships; and more willing to socially exclude one another. Although many other studies show that the *critical attitude of women is not a natural feature of them, but rather a product of the difficult working reality that women face*. \n\nAt this point, we should cite the meaning of **Queen Bee**. It’s a phenomenon first defined by C. Tavris, G.L. Staines, and T.E. Jayaratne in 1973. Queen bee is a derogatory term applied to women who have achieved success in traditionally male-dominated fields. These women are in positions of authority that are more critical of female subordinates. It is ubiquitous for women bosses to be more **strict** and **demanding**, especially towards other women. This phenomenon hasn’t been reduced, yet research in the *British Journal of Social Psychology* replicated the 2004 results indicate that **senior-level female professors still believe their female graduate students are less committed than their male counterparts**.\n\n \n![can-women-work-together-research.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fcan_women_work_together_research_3dde15bd6d.jpg)\n\nWe should say that **queen bees believe that they endure all the gender discrimination and succeed**; that’s why the other females should do the same. In that way, they want to emphasize that they are strong enough and different from other women to manage the fields that only men dominated. They can’t handle the fact that other women could have *different career paths*, and not all work the same way.\n\nNaomi Ellemers is one of the current study’s coauthors and a social psychology professor at Utrecht University in the Netherlands. Based on her own research along with others in this area, she believes that in evaluations of subordinates, **the women take into account their own experiences**, “including the realization that they had to overcome **gender bias**, did not receive much support from the organization and had to make many personal sacrifices to be successful.” \n\nTherefore, she says, *“These women know they had to show exceptional commitment to be successful, and this makes them less certain that other women should be willing and able to do the same.”* In other words, she says that the more senior women realize that younger women need to be **“super committed”** in order to have a chance at success.\nIn addition, another way women treat their subordinates differently is that they function in a more masculine way. \n\nThey believe that the only way to succeed is to **behave like men** since, for many years, there was a belief that *masculinity and success are synonymous*. Possibly, women with masculine behavior reach the top more easily and therefore maintain such behaviors, considering that it is the only way to success.\n\nThe researchers make it clear, “the queen bee phenomenon is not a cause, but rather a consequence of gender discrimination that continues to prevail in academia.” In fact, they think  **“queen bee”** may not even be the correct term to describe a woman who is doing her best to adapt and survive in male-dominated environments. Carol Tavris, a coauthor on the original 1974 study that coined the term, told The Atlantic she regretted giving such *“a catchy name”* to such a complex pattern of behavior. She explained that the term queen bee is often misinterpreted and may have a negative impact on initiatives to help women at work. The current researchers agree, suggesting a new term, **“self-group distancing,”** be adopted instead of “queen bee.”\n\nLaurie Rudman, a social psychologist at Rutgers University, found that some women’s disparagement of other women can be explained by what’s called **“system justification,”** a psychological concept in which long-oppressed groups, struggling to make sense of an unfair world, internalize negative stereotypes.\n\n![women-working-together-work.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fwomen_working_together_work_4ddf2a0fb0.jpg)\n\nWe conclude that women who hold leadership positions in their work have to overcome many obstacles. In essence, they play a role, the role that society with all gender stereotypes has set. Ellemers sums up that solving the queen bee problem can’t be *“achieved by fixing the women, but requires that we fix the organizations.”* In other words, *eliminating gender bias in our organizations* is the only way to eliminate this phenomenon. It makes a lot of sense for women to try to imitate behaviors that equality has shown will lead in one way or another to a successful career. *Women tried and worked very hard to succeed in their work, making many sacrifices.* \n\nWe would say that many of us have been **victims of this separation between men and women** and have lost some of our **boundaries**. In fact, many people do not accept it, and it seems terrible to them when a woman becomes a tougher boss than she needs, unlike a man. At the same time, there are still signs of jealousy towards women who have succeeded professionally. \n\nOf course, we also understand the need for women to break stereotypes and in order to get out of a situation that puts pressure on you, **you have to go to extremes in order for balance to come**. \n\nFor this reason, women have to be **stricter** just because they can’t show any sign of weakness or **sentimentality**, but this is a mistake of our society since women are still severely judged if they behave according to the stereotypes that indicate that women are sensitive and weak. Thus, we conclude that the woman is constantly judged whether she acts with **masculinity or femininity**, which is a stereotypical leftover. We don’t need to judge people, women or men, for their masculinity or femininity, but for their behavior towards their colleagues and employees but also their actions towards their work.\n\nNevertheless, *women need to understand that this makes it difficult for them to work with other women, and we have reached a point where we do not need to create additional barriers for other women trying to rise professionally* because, in essence, **we are reproducing the same problem that we have been trying to escape from for so many years**. We have to accept that women and men can be equal and contribute to the success of work in their own way. Imitating and reproducing negative stereotypes can only cause collaboration problems, as we saw above.\n\n\nResource: [The Atlantic](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.theatlantic.com\u002Fmagazine\u002Farchive\u002F2017\u002F09\u002Fthe-queen-bee-in-the-corner-office\u002F534213\u002F), [Forbes ](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.forbes.com\u002Fsites\u002Fshelleyzalis\u002F2019\u002F03\u002F06\u002Fpower-of-the-pack-women-who-support-women-are-more-successful\u002F)\n","research-can-women-work-with-other-women","women working together, female professional collaboration, workplace competition among women, supporting other women at work, debunking 'mean girls' myth","The rumor mill says women can't collaborate. We dive into the latest research to debunk the myth of female competition and show how to build powerful, supportive alliances.",{"id":389,"name":390,"alternativeText":52,"caption":52,"width":53,"height":54,"formats":391,"hash":412,"ext":57,"mime":60,"size":413,"url":414,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":415,"updatedAt":416},129,"can-women-work-together.jpg",{"large":392,"small":397,"medium":402,"thumbnail":407},{"ext":57,"url":393,"hash":394,"mime":60,"name":395,"path":62,"size":396,"width":64,"height":65},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_can_women_work_together_7d0a3b917d.jpg","large_can_women_work_together_7d0a3b917d","large_can-women-work-together.jpg",117.62,{"ext":57,"url":398,"hash":399,"mime":60,"name":400,"path":62,"size":401,"width":71,"height":72},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_can_women_work_together_7d0a3b917d.jpg","small_can_women_work_together_7d0a3b917d","small_can-women-work-together.jpg",36.79,{"ext":57,"url":403,"hash":404,"mime":60,"name":405,"path":62,"size":406,"width":78,"height":79},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_can_women_work_together_7d0a3b917d.jpg","medium_can_women_work_together_7d0a3b917d","medium_can-women-work-together.jpg",70.28,{"ext":57,"url":408,"hash":409,"mime":60,"name":410,"path":62,"size":411,"width":85,"height":86},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_can_women_work_together_7d0a3b917d.jpg","thumbnail_can_women_work_together_7d0a3b917d","thumbnail_can-women-work-together.jpg",11.22,"can_women_work_together_7d0a3b917d",248.66,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fcan_women_work_together_7d0a3b917d.jpg","2021-08-20T18:04:13.101Z","2021-08-20T18:04:13.129Z",{"id":22,"name":23,"slug":24,"createdAt":353,"updatedAt":354,"publishedAt":96},{"id":14,"name":419,"slug":420,"instagram":421,"facebook":422,"bio":423,"createdAt":424,"updatedAt":425,"publishedAt":426,"linkedIn":427,"avatar":428},"Amalia","amalia","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.instagram.com\u002Famalia.ka__\u002F","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.facebook.com\u002Famalia.kakampakou","Amalia is the Teacher. She loves what she does. She is addicted to detail: if it isn’t perfect, it’s not good enough. She loves her job and she loves writing. She wants to learn new things and she is very curious about everything. Her favorite question: Why? She usually answers the questions by herself, though.","2020-12-24T18:58:59.684Z","2020-12-27T14:58:33.474Z","2020-12-24T18:59:01.010Z","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.linkedin.com\u002Fin\u002Famalia-kakampakou-963945202\u002F",{"id":14,"name":253,"alternativeText":254,"caption":254,"width":110,"height":110,"formats":429,"hash":435,"ext":113,"mime":116,"size":436,"url":437,"previewUrl":62,"provider":90,"provider_metadata":62,"createdAt":438,"updatedAt":439},{"thumbnail":430},{"ext":113,"url":431,"hash":432,"mime":116,"name":433,"path":62,"size":434,"width":119,"height":119},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_amalia_fcd74699a4.png","thumbnail_amalia_fcd74699a4","thumbnail_amalia.png",57.6,"amalia_fcd74699a4",118.47,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Famalia_fcd74699a4.png","2020-12-24T18:58:30.657Z","2025-02-22T08:34:20.998Z","https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Fcan_women_work_together_7d0a3b917d.jpg",{"pagination":442},{"start":443,"limit":444,"total":445},0,5,59]