Creating Balance in Your Life
August 15, 2011 by Guest Author
Filed under Mind & Body, Mind & Spirit
or
When Your Personal and Professional Lives Collide, You Can’t Control the Wind But You Can Adjust Your Sails
By Barbara M. LaRock
As you begin to think about bringing more balance into your life, consider the following set of 12 rules from a brochure on white water rafting safety. They’re relevant and applicable to the choices we all make as we decide how to live our lives.
- Decide before you start if you’re going to steer from the front or back
- Someone has to be elected to call out orders clearly.
- Take rest in calm places.
- Never stop paddling even when it seems hopeless.
- If you get into trouble, don’t panic.
- Don’t be surprised if the boat doesn’t go where you want it to go.
- On a raft, the more activity on the left, the boat goes right, and vice versa.
- If you go under, let go of everything and you will float.
- Everyone paddles, but the current always takes you.
- Trust the boat and if you are in white water, hold on.
- Remember, white water is what you came for, so enjoy it.
- The people in the boat are the ones who will pull you out of the water if you go overboard, and they are also the people with whom you must eat supper.
Keep these rules in mind as you negotiate your own white water. They’re definitely points to ponder if you, like most people, are struggling to fit together all the pieces of your life. As you are probably all too well aware, most people today are overscheduled, over-committed and generally overwhelmed. This kind of over scheduling can leave you running on empty and desperate about how to improve your situation.
For people with children, the impact of this imbalance can be serious when you consider that as parents, you are your children’s first and most important teachers. Your kids are always learning from you and will copy into their own lives the way you live your life. Following are examples of things your children learn from you. In fact, they’re important areas to examine whether or not you have children.
- How you manage time and what choices you make about how you spend your time
- What priority you place on the relationships in your life
- How you handle both professional and personal stress
- How you share responsibilities such as chores at home or responsibilities at work
- What place hobbies and interests play in your life
- How you handle free time–days off, weekends or vacation
The lesson for all of us to learn is that it’s up to each individual to create a life that is balanced, a life that s/he loves. No one can do it for you. It’s your responsibility. It’s not healthy to keep saying, “if it weren’t for this” or “if it weren’t for that, everything would be great.” Nor is it healthy to put your satisfaction in the future, e.g., when the kids or older, or when you or your spouse get a raise, or when you finish a project, etc. Remember: Life is not a dress rehearsal. Your future is now.
An important part of developing self-awareness is to take some time to think about your priorities–to identify the areas that are important to you. Priorities are individual–what’s important to one person may not be important to another and vice versa. To that end, consider a few questions whose answers may prove quite revealing to you. Ask yourself: What do I really want for my life? When you consider this question, what comes to your mind first? Do you want more rest? More exercise? A promotion? More time alone? More time with family or friends? A new home? To telecommute? To expand your business? List everything that comes
into your mind.
Take a look at all that you’ve just written and ask yourself if your desires are really your desires or are they meant to please someone else. Also ask yourself if your desires are ones you think you should have rather than desires you truly want. “Shoulds” can get you into difficulty. Now that you’ve considered what’s important to you, prioritize these areas. In other words, put them in order of their importance to you. Then ask yourself how much time and attention the top priority items are receiving. This activity will help you see areas that are out of balance–areas that matter to you but aren’t getting enough of your time and attention and aren’t being nourished.





