Solutions December 2018 | Page 25

a false illusion of control. During the years when my outer world was filled with chaos and hardship, I felt without control, without options. Staying busy let me avoid stepping into the messy, needing-change portions of my life—from being audited by the IRS to struggling through a failing marriage. But it also kept me from pursuing my brave side, the side that grasps for the inches of change. I didn’t really spend time in spaces where things would change; I just rearranged the spaces of my life to create a semblance of order and temporary accomplishment. In other words, to use my grandpa’s work ethic as an example, I was tidying the barn when I should have been in the field. action. There is a profound difference in doing what needs to be done immediately versus doing what can be done tomorrow. The brake of busy prioritizes nonessential items with greater importance and dilutes the critical importance of essential, life-changing In order to break out of the busy excuse, you have to stop what you’re doing and ask yourself why you’re doing it right now. What’s the point of In the book Breaking Busy , my friend Alli Worthington details how being busy gives her a rush of accomplishment—I can relate to that—but also keeps her from looking at the corners of her life that she has been neglecting. You must understand that when I was busy, I felt good, as though I were fixing things that needed to be done, thus that rush. But I was ignoring what needed to be done. All busy does is rearrange the current without influencing the future. Solutions • 25