Really, youโ€™re not. How do I know that? Because I used to be too busy and one day, I chose a different thought and I havenโ€™t been too busy since. True story.

Itโ€™s been several months since Iโ€™ve stopped being โ€œtoo busyโ€ and my life is significantly different. Calmer. Clearer. Less frantic. Why? Did I get rid of my three kids? My job? My house and responsibilities? Nope. But I did get rid of using โ€œbusyโ€ as an excuse. I changed the way I looked and thought about things.

I decided I was sick and tired of feeling stressed and overwhelmed. As a thought coach, I know my feeling stressed or overwhelmed comes from my thoughts. I discovered the thought that was creating my stress was the thought: โ€œIโ€™m too busyโ€, โ€œI donโ€™t have enough timeโ€, or โ€œI have too much to doโ€.

At the time, this was not a shock for me to discover as I truly believed that I was too busy, that I did have too much to do and that I didnโ€™t have enough time. After all, I had spent my entire life filling my days full and fuller. There were lots of good reasons for my busy-ness but none of them served me. As a teenager, I had the perfectionist thing going on – the busier I was, the more I got done, the closer I was to being that perfect daughter for my parents. The more perfect I was, the more they’d love and support me. Well, you know how that turned out, BIG chuckle. I went from my that quest into early adulthood, thinking that if I worked hard enough, Iโ€™d be happy. If I got married, got the house, had the kids, then Iโ€™d be happy. Nope! My busy-ness at that point served several purposes: to distract me from a failing marriage and to look for external validation that I was a good mom (I mean, if I was making their lunches, signing them up for the correct sports, and tri-folding their clothes, I was a good mom, right?). After my divorce, I still filled my days full. Why? Partly because thatโ€™s what I had always done and partly because of a long-held belief that in order to โ€œmake itโ€ I had to be busy, busy, busy. Yet, how was I defining โ€œmaking itโ€? What did success look like for me? Externally I was there: I was healthy, had removed my kids and myself from an unhealthy situation, and loved my work. However, internally I was was consistently feeling stressed and overwhelmed. What was going on?

โ€œThe thinking that got you to where you are is not the thinking that will get you out; it got you there in the in the first place.โ€ Garret J Whiteย 

โ€œWe can not solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created themโ€ Albert Einstein

I stepped back to realize that my thoughts of being too busy were not serving me. In March I drew a line in the sand, committed to my mental health, and said that from that day forward instead of saying โ€œIโ€™m too busyโ€ I would say โ€œI have more than enough time to get done what I need to get done.โ€ I started consistently scheduling my days and consciously choosing how I would fill them. I changed my mindset from โ€œIโ€™m too busy for thatโ€ to โ€œI have more than enough timeโ€. I knew a scarcity mindset would not produce an abundant life and an abundant life is what I was creating.

The energy we put out in the world comes back to us. If Iโ€™m rushed, frantic, and overwhelmed, I attract that to me and into my life. If Iโ€™m calm, relaxed, and deliberate, I attract that into my world.

Are my days any less full? No. But, in changing my mindset and using tools discussed in last weekโ€™s blog, Iโ€™ve structured my life so that my days are easier. Easier on my nervous system but also easier on me, my partner, and my kids. The only choice I had to make was to choose to create something new in my life. Next week Iโ€™ll write more of how we canโ€™t create a future based on our past. For this week, ask yourself where youโ€™re on autopilot in your life? Where are you allowing old thoughts and old beliefs run (or ruin) your days?

 

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