Act as if it were impossible to fail.
-- Dorothea Brande
A co-worker of mine said recently, "I don't know how you do it all, I can hardly figure out how to be a dad and work full time... but you are a mom, you work full time and you have all these other things going on."
I admit, my plate is a little full. And I do have to stop once and a while and make sure that my full plate does not become too much of a source of pride. Because you know what comes after pride... right?
And I don't really want to drop a full plate.
I think that the reason I take on so much, is that I don't believe I will fail at them. I look at a task and think, "can I do this? do I want to do this?" and if my heart says yes both times, then I take it on.
Periodically, and driven by my own stress level, I reassess and sometimes I scoop a little off that full plate. I did that recently when I stepped down off of a committee that I'd spent two years chairing. It meant a lot to me, but at the same time I recognized that I had to let it go so someone else could do a better job.
Other things came in to fill it's spot... but they were different things, I could do them better or they took less energy or they were a better fit with my family.
I've also started trying to multi-task LESS and I'm finding I get MORE done. It used to be that I tried to juggle everything, including being a mom. But I started to realized that at the end of the day while I was here with my kids, I wasn't here for them. Once I started working full time and my son went back to school, I started seeing them even less. It meant that I wanted the time with them to be about them... not about me on the computer.
So now I spend more time playing, talking and attending. And when they are in bed, I sit down here at the computer and write.
2 comments:
I think you are so right that by taking a little off your plate, you can do more with the other things - and I'm sure, you do them better! Thanks for the reminder to keep my life balanced.
You DO very well Girl!
Also, women learn early on how to 'truly' multi-task, unlike us guys.
Guys CAN learn... but many don't WANT to. To quote a contractor (male) who disparagingly said to me when I asked him to hang the drapes (after installing a new window), "HUH! That's skirt work!"
Lyle
The Unsticking Coach
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