How To Tell What You Want To Do From What You 'Need'
To Do
Busyness
is a problem. If you're like millions
of Americans, you've developed a tendency to set yourself
up on a never-ending
treadmill of work, housekeeping, socializing,
social networking... oh, and trying to make time for a
relationship, family, and becoming your "best self." This
busyness grind often leads to intense feelings of burnout that
seem almost impossible to overcome.
And
then, in a rare calm, you're left with an hour of free time to do
whatever you want for once. And it hits you: I have
NO idea what I actually want to do. I can't even begin to tell.
The sensation is more common than you might
think. Fortunately, mental health experts we spoke with were quick to offer
solutions on this major symptom of busyness: the confusion about what
one feels obligated to do versus what one wants to
do.
The first thing to understand about the
confusion, they say, is this:
Staying busy is our way of avoiding
pain.
In a moment when we're not busy, we might feel
anxiety. Or loneliness. Or guilt, or a range of other unpleasant, painful
emotions. Staying
active is our way of quashing these before they start,
says Christine Carter, a sociologist featured in
JetBlue's recent mini-film on busyness.
Technology enables us to avoid those tough
feelings. "If you're standing in line and a difficult emotion comes up,
you can check your phone," Carter explains. "Any time you're feeling
guilty or uncomfortable you can have a drink, check your Facebook or eat the
whole pan of brownies. We become numb by not letting ourselves feel."
But in avoiding pain, we're equally
avoiding joy.
There's a tendency to become tangled in
myriad little tasks -- paperwork, phone calls, social events -- that you
believe you ought to do, but don't necessarily want to
do. This is a major cause of burnout, says Michael Leiter,
a psychologist who specializes in occupational stress. "When your heart
isn't in (an activity), it doesn't give you much," he says. "It
drains your energy and really shallows you out."
What's
more, numbing negative feelings also
suppresses the ability to feel good ones. "If
you numb anxiety by staying busy, you're also numbing your ability to
experience joy," Carter says. "You've narrowed the range of what you
can feel."
But there's good news...
Your body already
knows what you want to do from what you feel you "need" to
do. Just listen.
Ever feel so stressed that you can't
pinpoint what you truly enjoy anymore? Don't worry, says New
York University psychologist Gabriele Oettingen.
Your body already knows; your mind just needs to stop doing and start
listening. "When you're busy, you're reactive to demands from the
'outside' world," Oettingen says. "You need to take a moment to cut
through the demands and decide what you really want."
Experts have varying strategies for achieving
such moments. Some general steps:
1) Give yourself some time to do
nothing, every day. Allow your mind to wander.
"Most
of our brain activity, and certainly all of our nervous system, operates on an
subconscious level," Carter says. "It does not speak in words. It can
only talk to you in body sensations and emotions." So stop those numbing
behaviors: Put down the phone, and literally stare into space. It could be
while waiting in line, or it could be in the shower. Just 20 minutes of open
brain time is all you need.
2) Let yourself feel what you feel.
Notice body sensations.
Notice
what you're really feeling, and where those feelings physically occur. Is it a
sad sensation, in your throat? A lonely ache in your stomach? Imagination is useful
here, Carter says: Can you give your feelings a color or shape? Leiter
recommends recording them in a notebook as they emerge.
via GIPHY
3) Accept what you feel.*
Have a plan for when negative feelings
surface, Carter says. Remember that physiologically,any emotion in your body will only last about 90
seconds.
Oettingen
has a routine she calls WOOPing: During an introspective
moment, identify a wish for either now (a worry-free
evening, for example) or the future (a career in which you feel fulfilled).
Then imagine the outcome of that wish, determine which obstacles
prevent you from realizing that wish, and make a plan for getting
past them.
*And don't be
afraid of BIG change.
Ditching the busyness may lead you to realize
you don't truly enjoy much of what you do, Leiter says. The majority of his
clients with burnout completely switch careers after coming to understand
what actually makes them happy. But this is a joyous part, and
one that provides a huge
mental payoff like increased creativity, productivity
and attention span.
"So much busyness is driven by anxiety
and performance for other people," Leiter says. "You’ve got to
stop and reflect on just yourself."
And best of all, you'll be able to understand
what you really, truly love to do.
Suzy
StrutnerAssociate
Lifestyle Editor, The Huffington Post
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/how-to-tell-what-you-want-to-do_5646438ce4b060377348f896?ir=Healthy+Living%3Fncid%3Dnewsltushpmg00000003§ion=india&adsSiteOverride=in
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