This week I was supposed to start working on launching my summer online course. But I was dreading it.
I could logically reason myself into taking action or not taking action. I meditated on it and asked, "What does my heart want." The answer was clear. I don't want to teach this course this summer.
I don't need reasons or excuses not to do it, which can always be debated. What my heart wants can't be refuted. One weekend of vacation and 1-hour of self-reflection just saved me dozens of hours of work. I need to remind myself of this because the busier I am, the faster my self-care disappears when that is when self-care is most needed. I'm so good at taking action that I can easily move far down a path in the wrong direction.
Instead, I'm actively practicing doing nothing.
It's a challenge for me to be okay with taking a break. So much of my self-worth and happiness is derived from working and achieving. I'm trying to prove to myself that I am worthy. Prove that I am good enough. But no matter what I achieve, I always feel behind.
I've become introverted around my family since none of them really know or care about what I do for work. It's like I don't have anything to talk about if I'm not talking about work. I'm mourning this sad existence. I want to know who I am and what I care about outside of achieving and work.
I've been reflecting on this asking myself:
What hole am I trying to fill with achievement?
What needs do I have that need to be satisfied with achievement?
What other ways can I fill those needs?
How would I feel about myself if I didn't achieve these things?
I'm trying to hold on to the thought, "If I sit in front of the TV and do nothing for the rest of my life, my life would still have value and meaning."
In this past week of doing nothing, I laughed so hard that my cheeks went stiff with pain. I sat in awe, watching my 8-month old son fiercely dissolve an orange in his mouth like it was his most extraordinary mission in life. I went swimming twice in the middle of workdays. I binge-watched Selling Sunset. I revealed my extroverted self, hanging out with friends and family every day. I feel more human—more like my childlike self.
Whenever I slow down and stop being Sisyphus pushing my ball up the hill, magic happens. Things arise without force. I'm not sure what will come of this, but I know the shift in my energy will attract what comes next.
Thank you for taking care of you, Lauren! And thanks for the questions to think on. Looking forward to journaling about these. Doing nothing definitely takes strength.
I am taking a month off in July. Already dealing with whether to achieve a lot or just chill :) Loved you last paragraph.