It’s
2015, and you are laser focused. You built a vision board, cleaned your
work space, and mapped out your short-term and long-term goals. You’ve
got back to back meetings, a new idea for a side hustle, and all types
of new ideas. You’re on fire.
Unfortunately,
fires aren’t always sustainable. The best ones eventually fizzle out,
and if they don’t get the right amount of oxygen and kindling, they
become ashes. That shouldn’t happen to you though, and here are 21 ways
to keep your busy life from affecting your goals.
1. When you’re busy, you aren’t present.
Life
is made up of hundreds of thousands of moments. Some that move us,
others that change us, and some that provoke us to action. Being busy
takes us away from those moments.
Millennial expert Jullien Gordon has a remedy for this: know the difference between being a workaholic vs. a high performer.
The former wants to look more important, but the latter seeks out
important work. Knowing the difference can help you do more in each
moment of your day.
2. When you’re busy, you opt out of opportunities.
Opportunities
are everywhere. They come up in coffee shops, via social media outlets
like Twitter, and through mutual connections. When you’re busy, you
often miss opportunities because you only see them as distractions, not
spaces for you to grow and advance.
3. When you’re busy, you confuse motion for progress.
We all want to do more with what we have. Unfortunately, we think being busy means we are making strides. The Pareto Principle
presents another hypothesis which deserves some attention. It states
that 80% of your results come from 20% of your time. If you are able to
figure out what that 20% looks like (and the actions you take to get
there), you can create immeasurable leverage. That means you’ll spend
more time doing the things that really drive you toward your goals, and
not just “things” to fill space.
4. When you’re busy, you don’t prioritize effectively.
Priorities
are how we separate the things that we need to do, versus ones that we
should. They keep us in line and on track. But when we are too busy,
everything seems like it needs to be done. It doesn’t. When you identify
what matters versus what can wait, you become efficient with your time,
allowing you to do the things you really want to do and with more
regularity.
5. When you’re busy, you make excuses for actual problems.
When
we have so much to do, sometimes we can’t focus on problems. That can
be productive, but unhealthy. Issues in our lives can only be ignored
until they seep into other places where they shouldn’t be. You shouldn’t
wait until you’re on the verge of a breakdown to address something
that’s hurting you. But when you’re too busy, sometimes that’s the only
way to get your own attention. Don’t wait for it to get there.
6. When you’re busy, you’re more prone to multitask (which your brain hates).
How many tabs do you have open right now? I average between six and nine on a good day. That alone damages my brain by 40%.
That productivity we so desperately crave is undermined when we do a
lot of things at once. That workflow has to stop. It feels great, but
it’s terrible for you.
Instead, try a new workflow. Single-tasking
is exactly what it sounds like: doing one task, with no distractions.
It may take some time to adopt this new type of workflow, but it will do
wonders for you in the long term.
7. When you’re busy, you forget to invest in yourself.
You
are the most important company you’ll ever work for. In order to keep
growing and expanding, it’s imperative that you fight to continue your
growth. The internet has become the new library. Ted Talks, Khan
Academy, and thousands of other courses are there for you to take advantage of. It doesn’t have to be “traditional” learning either. Taking time to invest in a hobby or side project can help you be better at your job.
Before you say you don’t have time, here’s a better question:
Can you afford to stay the same and still grow?
8. When you’re busy, your vision gets blurry.
Ideally,
you’re busy because you are working towards something. A new job, a
promotion, financial freedom, or simply trying to change something. It’s
hard to remember your “why” for doing what you do. But it’s arguably
the most important motivator you’ll ever have.
That’s exactly what Lo, the founder of Can’t Stay Put,
did. Can’t Stay Put is a lifestyle movement built to inspire people to
break out of their comfort zones, see the world, and live the lives they
only dreamed about. She did that by finding her vision and purpose on a
trip to Maui, and hasn’t looked back since. She transformed her life by
finding out exactly what she was supposed to be doing.
9. When you’re busy, you forget to love and care for yourself.
Self-love
should be non-negotiable in your life. It should be a part of how you
remain successful. Taking a vacation or a day off isn’t being lazy or
neglecting your responsibilities: it’s a part of remaining in shape
holistically, in mind, body, and spirit.
10. When you’re busy, you don’t make time for doing nothing.
The
most successful people in the world take time to actively not do
things. LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner schedules blocks of time that are free
periods for him to think, strategize, and refocus. If a CEO can find
time, I challenge you to also figure out areas where you can block your
own time. If your schedule is preset, try waking up earlier
11. When you’re busy, you equate patience with complacency.
Great
things take time and effort. With only a finite amount of time, you can
control your effort. Sometimes we think our efforts should put us in a
different place immediately. It’s never that simple, though. Being busy
creates a myth of perpetual progress: the faster we move, the closer we
are getting to our goals, right?
Not always.
Your effort, multiplied by your consistency, is what sets you up to
capitalize on the moments that are made for you to shine. Patience means
you’re not watching the scoreboard, as you’re in the game everyday.
Don’t count the number of shots you take, because you only need one to
win the game.
12. When you’re busy, you unconsciously sacrifice consistency.
Since
being busy isn’t tied to getting work done, its easy to become caught
up inside the daily grind. Things change, and the time you had dedicated
to gaining a skill or learning something new gets pushed aside. That
might appear expedient in the short term, but building that new skill
could be the key to taking you or your business to the next level.
13. When you’re busy, you don’t have time to think.
Thinking
deeply and clearly is a skill that comes with practice. When we’re
busy, we have to deal with floods of information, and often we are
responsible for opening the dam. Professor and author Cal Newport describes the benefits of deep work (which requires deep thought) in three ways:
1. Continuous improvement of the value of your work output.
2. An increase in the total quantity of valuable output you produce.
3. Deeper satisfaction (aka., “passion”) for your work.
2. An increase in the total quantity of valuable output you produce.
3. Deeper satisfaction (aka., “passion”) for your work.
Those outcomes are exactly what we try to produce as a result of our productivity
14. When you’re busy, you neglect to set boundaries.
Our
world is always-on. Texts, tweets, emails, and status updates. Most of
them can be dealt with later, but we choose to take all of them at once.
Answering email isn’t your job; its a function of the role you have. If
you dont have distinct times when you aren’t doing that, then you can
easily be side tracked. If you’re focused, you’re always going to be
thinking about your work in some aspect, but you shouldn’t always be
available. Know the difference.
15. When you’re busy, you aren’t working to your potential.
Being
busy requires a consistent shifting of focus, which takes you away from
using concentrated effort to complete the tasks you need too. The
Harvard Business Review calls this cumulative attention debt,
and it keeps people from generating new ideas and solutions to complex
problems. Quicken Loans CEO Dan Gilbert has an insightful quote on how
to tell if you’re really living up to where you should be:
“Innovation is rewarded, but execution is worshipped.”
You can only execute when you have the space to develop ideas. Being busy takes you out of that space.
16. When you’re busy, your friends can quickly become acquaintances.
Friendship is a critical component in how we engage in the world. We
need other perspectives and opinions to help shape us, push us, and
develop us. But being busy, we often put our friends on the fringes.
We’re so busy on the grind that we don’t have
time for their counsel or insights. That’s a risky endeavor, as they are
sometimes the only people who are able to tell us about ourselves and
have it stick. Make time for the people who will tell you the truth,
especially when you don’t want to hear it.
17. When you’re busy, you become emotionally unavailable.
How
many times have you tried to be there for someone, but knew only 60% of
you was there? The other 40% was scattered around various places, and
your mind was racing. Executive coach and charisma expert Olivia Fox
Cabane lists three key components for developing higher levels of
charisma: power, warmth and presence.
18. When you’re busy, you’re really joining a cult no one ever wants to be in.
Everyone
is always doing something, and our culture rewards efficiency, even
when it’s not practical nor sustainable. The ‘cult of busy’ is an
association that we opt into because of work, the speed of life, and an
incessant desire to try and do everything. It taps our relationships,
drains us physically, and leaves us confused and looking for answers.
Work will always be there, but the connections and moments that we
cherish and are intrinsic to our humanity, won’t be.
19. When you’re busy, you forget to dream.
Dreams
fuel us. They let us break through our current state, and are the
building blocks of desire. Without the dream, your passion and drive
won’t be sustained long enough for you to actualize them. Dreaming is
what allows seemingly ordinary people to do extraordinary things
20. When you’re busy, you put your health in danger.
Being constantly busy can trigger chronic stress,
which leads to a host of issues that aren’t good for your body. It
doesn’t have to be that way, especially when you build a routine that
prioritizes your health. There are dozens of apps to
help you maintain a better regimen and routine. But it’s really about
what you want for yourself. If you’re truly serious about doing
incredible work, then you will be equally as committed to keeping your
body in tune.
21. When you’re busy, you forget your “why”.
Your
“why” allows you to achieve and persist under adverse circumstances,
when a lot of other people might tap out. It’s what allows you to
persevere through crazy work hours in the first place. But you’re not
simply a worker. To consistently remember it though, you need to create
time to refresh and think about the reason you do what you do.
Having
things to do isn’t bad. But busyness without purposefulness is a recipe
for burnout and personal dissatisfaction. Make 2015 the year for you to
live (or find) your purpose, commitment to being present, and fight to
own your schedule. It isn’t easy, but nothing worth having is. Let’s
make 2015 the year we measure the importance of the work we do, instead
of how much of our calendars we can fill up. Let’s hold each other
accountable and make this year the best we’ve ever had.
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