You’ve always got enough time!

I am just delighted to have Rachel Papworth of Green and Tidy joining us today. A marvelous companion to her last post here at Bliss Habits, Serenity is a Matter of Scheduling, this post will help you call a truce with time.  Try on Rachel’s wisdom and notice how much calmer you feel!

“Don’t say you don’t have enough time. You have exactly the same number of hours per day that were given to Helen Keller, Pasteur, Michelangelo, Mother Teresa, Leonardo Da Vinci, Thomas Jefferson, and Albert Einstein”.
H Jackson Brown, Jr American author of Life’s Little Instruction Book

A couple of years ago, I noticed I was expending a lot of energy worrying that I didn’t have enough time to do everything. I would get stressed and anxious, not to mention grumpy and irritable. This despite the fact that, based on past experience, I knew that the chances were that I would get everything done. So why was I always in such a state of anxious overwhelm?

I was so determined to tackle this that I specifically took the issue on through personal development work. I signed up to coach on a full-on 14 week programme. On top of my already busy working life, I travelled 2 hours each way for weekly 3-hour evening sessions and three full Saturdays, provided telephone coaching for four people and ran a project in my local community.

For the first couple of months, I thought I might explode! I was constantly wired and on edge and took it out on everyone around me. And then one day I found myself claiming that I didn’t have time to have a challenging conversation that I needed to have.

And that’s when I finally got it. I wasn’t stressed about time. I was using time as an excuse to avoid stuff.

There was no reason to stress about time. The reality was that I’d made commitments (to myself or others) to do a certain amount of stuff, and I’d got a certain amount of time to do it in. Either the stuff I’d committed to do could be done in that time, or it couldn’t.

If it could, great. Nothing to stress about.

If it couldn’t, it couldn’t. And there was some action to take. I could tell someone I wouldn’t be doing something after all. I could ask someone else to take something on. I could reschedule something. I could think of a quicker way to do something. I could find a way to combine two activities.

I realised that, when I seemed to be worrying about time, what was really happening was that I was afraid of failing.

I was afraid that I wasn’t up to at least one thing I’d committed to do. I was afraid that I was going to mess up, make a fool of myself, be revealed as a charlatan…Everyone would know I was stupid and inadequate.

Seeing this gave me power over it. Now, whenever I notice myself stressing about time, I know to look deeper. There is always something I’ve committed to doing of which, for some reason, I’m afraid. Usually because my demons are telling me I’m not capable.

That gives me my power back. I can thank my demons for sharing and get on with what there is to do. Often I do the thing I’m most scared of straight away. Or get in touch with someone who can help me with it.

Then I get on with my day in a state of serenity, instead of anxiety.

Phew!

If you worry about having enough time to get everything done, is that what you’re really afraid of? I’d love to know if what I’ve shared above resonates with you.

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Click here to join the Green and Tidy community, and receive hints, tips and inspirational stories. As a bonus you’ll get a recording of a decluttering masterclass absolutely free.

For over 20 years, Rachel has been helping public sector and charitable organisations declutter, clarify and organize their thinking. She foundedPapworth Research & Consultancy Ltd in 1997. She has carried out more than 100 projects for organizations including City, District and County Councils, FE Colleges, the Government Equalities Office, Macmillan Cancer Support and KPMG.

She is a passionate advocate for low impact living, and has (so far!) reduced her personal carbon footprint to two thirds of the UK average. She is the external evaluator for Climate Connections, a Department for International Development funded project, which raises awareness of the links between climate change and poverty.

Through Green and Tidy, these skills and experience are available to you in your home. She’ll train, coach and support you to declutter and organize your home so it works for you.

You can find Rachel on her blogfacebook and on twitter @greenandtidy.

4 thoughts on “You’ve always got enough time!

    • You’re so welcome. Thank you for posting. Me too by the way – I just started a new job and I’m so glad I had this insight a few years ago. When I’m stressing out about how much I’ve got to do, I know to confront what I’m afraid of head-on. I spent today planning and scheduling, which helped too. Good luck with your new job. 🙂

      • pam blackwell says:

        This is me to a tee! Thanks for sharing…. and now to tackle those tasks my inner demon tells me I’m not capable of! Often I put something off until it threatens to really get me into bother – and then I find that it was simple to do after all. And all that time wasted t with it niggling away at me and fretting over it!

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