Keeping Too Busy?
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Many people use busyness as a way to avoid feeling. They do not want to face the issues of their lives, so they generate an endless stream of appointments, errands, and projects to avoid being with themselves. They say they do not have time to deal with their pain because they are too busy, but the very purpose of being so busy is to not deal with the pain. They are not running around; they are running away, which just drives the pain deeper. Blaise Pascal observed, "All of man's problems stem from his inability to sit in a room quietly by himself."
As a culture, we are very much in denial about our addiction to busyness. Denial stands for "Don't Even Notice I Am Lying." We have many 12-step and other support groups to deal with our cultural addictions to drinking, drugs, sex, gambling, and debt; yet we do not have many 12-step groups for workaholics or busyholics, which number far more in the population than any other single group of addicts.
Living at the end of your rope may be typical, but I assure you it is not natural. Yet we accept busyholicism as normal, even respectable. If you were to show up at work drunk every day, you would soon be confronted and either fired or encouraged to get help. But when you work 12 hours a day, whittle your personal life back to a hangnail, and have to paste Post-Its on your hotel room TV screen to remind you what city you are in, no one questions that.
You scurry frantically across town, flooring the gas pedal at yellow lights, amped by intravenous Starbucks, driving with one hand, punching cell phone numbers with the other, and trying to keep the hot Styrofoam cup of triple espresso between your thighs from thwarting your future parenthood. You pride yourself on multitasking and feel like an underachiever if you're not spinning at least three plates at once, checking e-mail on line 1 while toggling between your boss on line 2 and your honey on the cell. Then someone knocks at the door and when you return you forgot who was on which line. But WAIT A MINUTE! (Huff, huff, puff, puff.) Does this really feel good? Is this really how you were born to live? If you did this for the rest of your life, how would you feel when you leave? Is it possible you could actually have a life?
I sat in on a magazine interview with Dr. Stephan Rechtschaffen, CEO of Omega Institute and author of Timeshifting. During the interview he suggested that we might be happier and more successful if we focus on one thing at a time. "But aren't you dangerously influencing people against multitasking?" the reporter asked. My God, I thought, we've come to a point where we have to defend being fully present!
The Chinese written character for the word "busy" is a combination of two other characters: "killing" and "heart." Heart disease, the foremost cause of death in our culture, is just what it says: the heart is not at ease. It is stressed. It is pressured. It is being asked to do more than it is designed to do. Yet heart disease, like all disease, can be prevented or reversed by returning to ease. And what is ease, but living in harmony with your intentions?
Each day set aside some time to do something to feed your soul. Treat yourself according to the style to which you'd like to become accustomed. Rassle with your pooch or curl up with your cat. Make smoldering love in the middle of the afternoon. Buy that new high-definition flat screen TV you've been eying. Dance naked to your favorite CD. Whatever you do, don't settle for a life without luster; then you become just another zit on the complexion of life. When your heart feels full, you will have so much more clarity and presence that you will easily handle the things that are problems now.
This article was excerpted from:
Why Your Llife Sucks
by Alan H. Cohen.
Reprinted with permission of the publisher, Jodere Group, Inc. ©2002. www.joderegroup.com
Info/Order this book
About the Author
Alan H. Cohen is the author of 17 popular inspirational books,
including the best selling The Dragon Doesn't Live here Anymore and the
award winning A Deep Breath of Life. A frequent guest on television and
radio, Alan is a faculty member at Omega Institute in New York,
conducts life mastery seminars in Hawaii, and is an acclaimed keynote
speaker at educational, health, and corporate institutions throughout
the world. www.alancohen.com

| Our neighbors have 4 children...........they are so busy, driving. in and out of the house a thousand times a day......mostly sporting events.......never spend more than 5 minutes inside their house...........they return home at approximately 11 p.m. every school night..........go into the back yard for an hour or more of basketball and/or skateboarding on the curved platform, etc., etc., You get my drift!...........I am wondering when do these kids study? They all attend private schools, but are they learning everything in the classroom? Also, their sports are all school related. They are so busy, that when my 98 year-old mother waves to them from our window, they are like race horses, frowning and looking straight ahead with side blinders. Good news.......the neighbors on the right side of us eat meals together , take Sunday drives together, take turns walking the toddler, and/or their dog. and they all wave hello to us and smile a lot!! There is nothing like staying in one place, enjoying ourselves and our loved ones. |