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23 Feb 2008 03:21:29 | Marie-Pier Charron, Life Coach
Do you wish you had more time to do things you love, to be with
your children, your life partner… and maybe with yourself, too?
Do you wish you had the energy to cook healthy meals for
yourself – or to exercise? Are you always too stressed to
meditate or pray (or whatever makes you feel at peace)?
Then here’s a clever exercise thought out by a time management
specialist. I invite you to follow these instructions in your
mind: Start by taking a glass bowl and gathering some big rocks,
smaller rocks, some sand, and water, too. Now, fill your bowl
with the big rocks, until you cannot fit a single one in it.
Look at your bowl… would you say that it is full? Yes it is,
right? Then, add the smaller rocks to the big rocks – as many as
you can. Now, is your bowl full? Well, yes, it is…Continue by
putting in as much sand as you can in the bowl… is it full yet?
Or will it be full when you will have poured some water?
Lesson #1 is: We can always do more, add more to our schedule or
to-do list. Lesson #2 is: We have to put in the big rocks first
(our priorities). We cannot incorporate them to the bowl after
the other (smaller) elements – our non-priorities.
Many of us would like to find a way to squeeze into our days
everything we want to do (trying to push the big rocks in a
sand-filled schedule). We really want to play a new instrument,
to exercise, or to write a book (for example), yet we do not
always have the time or the energy to take the first step. We
feel like the circumstances are more powerful than we are. Why
is that? And how do we prioritize our… priorities? First and
foremost, we have to evaluate if our priorities really are
priorities. There is a major difference between wishes and
choices… You may wish to spend a half-hour every day reading one
of those 500-page biographies you love so much… But if you
aren’t doing it, you haven’t really chosen it – it’s not a
priority. Why? Maybe you have a hard time relaxing after work,
maybe you feel you should always be doing something “useful” and
reading makes you feel guilty. The bottom line is that something
is blocking you. Hmmm, maybe you don’t even like reading that
much, after all…
What motivates your wishes, or your choices? Sometimes we like
the idea of a certain activity, but we don’t like doing it that
much. Sometimes we want the results, but dislike the process
(exercise, anyone?). Sometimes we want to do things because they
are valued by others around us. Or we think we “should” be doing
this and that, even when it is not a necessity.
If you don’t have time to do what you wish you would do, ask
yourself, “Will this specific action contribute something rich
and precious to my life? If I die in one year, will I be happy I
did this?” If not, and if you’re under no obligation (like
paying the bills), I have a suggestion for you: stop wanting to
do it – you’re wasting your energy, and irritating yourself.
We accumulate dust in our houses, in our cars, on our clothes,
but we accumulate dust in our schedules as well. We hang on not
only to old habits, but also to old objectives. Our priorities
change, our needs change – sometimes abruptly – and we don’t
always adjust. We stopped studying Spanish 10 years ago and we
keep trying to go back to it; we imagine going to Mexico and
communicating easily with the locals, we imagine impressing our
friends (and ourselves) when we’ll speak this lovely language…
but we never find the time or energy to study it. Maybe we don’t
really want or need to speak Spanish perfectly, after all… Or
maybe we don’t really need to do the laundry every other day…
maybe we can stop volunteering at our children’s school if we
don’t get much out of it anymore.
When we dust our schedule (and our outdated objectives), we make
room, we create space for those effervescent priorities that
correspond exactly to what we need, at that precise moment; we
free ourselves from activities and wishes that do not serve us
anymore. Nothing is a true waste of time, of course, but some
choices are far more constructive, and fun, than others. You may
not be able to order a chicken tortilla and a green salad with
the dressing on the side if you go to Mexico. You may not become
a size 0 and fit in your wedding dress, or tuxedo. You may not
have 10 clean towels piled up all the time. But changing your
standards, your expectations, and your objectives, will make you
feel like there is room for you in your schedule – and in your
life. What would you change in your life if you assumed that
living was meant to be a lot of fun?
About Author :
Marie-Pier Charron, life coach, is founder of Implosions, and
editor of a monthly newsletter filled with practical tips and
powerful self-growth strategies. To get your own free
subscription, visit her at http://www.implosions.net
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