5 simple suggestions how to overcome overwhelm and take control of your life

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Overwhelmed seems to be the state of being for most of us these days. Most of us live in a modern, fast-paced, overstimulated life.

Overwhelmed by the flood of information on our smartphones, we find it hard to unplug. It’s a strong lure to have the internet open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Overwhelmed by the volume of tasks we must complete every day, both at home and at work. We are in a constant state of carrying the weight of the world on our shoulders. Feeling like the Greek mythological titan, Atlas, has become common.

Overwhelmed emotionally by living in toxic relationships, bombarded by negative energy and intention. We don’t take care of ourselves until we are ill.

No small wonder that the dictionary defines overwhelmed as “being buried beneath a large mass or heavy object”. That’s how being overwhelmed feels. A heavy weight that translates into a physiological weight we are all tote around all the time.

How do we overcome the overwhelm?

Here are five simple suggestions which I suggest to my clients in order to recognize their burden, then feel lighter and freer immediately.

1. Organize and prioritize

Some of us go old school on this one, relying on a pen and paper. There is something about the weight of the page and ink that has a focusing effect on some of us. Think about going back to real pages in a diary, on a calendar, or a hardcover datebook in order to keep yourself organized. When I begin to feel like I’m juggling too many things at one time, I get out a legal pad, or my favorite notebook, and make lists.

These lists get prioritized into ‘immediate’ (as right now), ‘eventually’ (to do pretty soon), and then the ‘probably’ (not any time in the near future). When you break down your list, you’ll quickly see what needs your attention. And if something repeatedly shows up in the ‘probably’ column, it might be time to let it go.

2. Put boundaries on overstimulation

Have one place where your electronics sleep at night. And make that not near your head or right next to your bed. If any of you have children, they will watch how you deal with electronics and the internet. If you are on it all the time and hardly ever make eye contact, they will take this as a sign that it’s okay.

A news cycle repeats itself about every twenty minutes. You can see or hear it all day. Spending time immersed in negative news and sensationalism is not going to help you be focused, concentrated, or calm. If you really want to know something right away, pick a source, give yourself a time limit, then turn it off. Siri and Alexa are rabbit holes, sucking you back to your electronics and away from a calm mind.

How about a local online newspaper to get your local news? Unless there’s dangerous weather approaching, where your safety depends on constant updates, turn it off.

Music is good. An intelligent or funny podcast is great.

Spending your days listening to the woes of the world which you have no influence on, is a setup for stress, sadness, and aggravation. (Tweet it!)

3. Say ‘no thank you’ when you mean ‘no’

Limit your time with toxic people or situations. Most of us want to do the right thing. We want to be there for other people, institutions, and organizations that we care about. At the same time, modern life has spread us too thin with a countless amount of those ‘immediate’ obligations.

My friend and mentor, Sam Bennett, has a great solution to this problem. When someone asks you to be part of something and your gut immediately says “no”, listen to your gut. If ‘maybe’ is really ‘maybe’, then ask to get back to them. If maybe means no then thank them for thinking about you and say it doesn’t work in your schedule. No more agonizing at the last minute when you said yes but really don’t want to go. Say no. Save your energy for the things you really want to do.

4. Take care of yourself

Eat well, sleep well, and be your biggest fan.

I have a client who carries around a big heavy stress bucket. She hates disappointing people and constantly feels overwhelmed. We worked out a saying to get her to take time enough not to volunteer for everything and be better to herself. You may call it a mantra, meditation, or a handful of other things but it goes:

“I am a capable, kind, well-educated human being and people love me. I deserve to be happy.”

This is followed by a deep breath. Sometimes she has to say this ten times to get herself to relax but eventually, she does, and it works.

When you feel yourself sliding into a stressful or overwhelming situation, breath. Think of someone you love and draw energy from that memory to help you cope.
Take care of yourself, eat well, sleep well, and be your biggest fan.

5. Stop the cycle from drama to trauma

We all know people who live in this cycle of drama. We also know the ones who like to pull the rest of us into it. Many of us have a friend or acquaintance where everything in their life is a HUGE event. Everything is a big deal. No one understands them, and no one works as hard. No one feels the same tremendous pressure, and no one has the enormous responsibility.

They suffer and are always in the middle of some crisis or catastrophe or other. They constantly ask for help, attention, or an audience. These folks, however well-meaning, are exhausting. Life is challenging enough without making every little detail a drama.

So you have a choice. They can either dial down the drama of their own personal reality show, or you can turn it off. This kind of a person is generally self-centered and isn’t a good listener. They get some kind of satisfaction having you become part of their drama.

Choose calm

We all experience at least one of these stresses simultaneously. Choose calm and limit your exposure. Overwhelm should motivate us to action and then be let go.

Be kind to yourself.

Now over to you: What has got you feeling overwhelmed?

If you need some help, send me a WhatsApp message and let’s connect and work together towards a less overwhelmed existence.

 

 

 

 

 

Coaching with Tamara Mendelson

Are you struggling through an unexpected life change? I’m now taking applications for 2019 Coaching and I’d love to hear from you! Sign up below to receive my coaching application form straight to your inbox.
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Why happy shouldn’t be the goal but happier should

Being happy all the time is unrealistic and bad for your health. Putting on a happy face is not a life goal. Being happier is. Our world is a turbulent place and happy is one of many emotions that we feel daily. We are an insecure tribe and it’s okay to feel your feelings.

This is not an invitation to sit your four-year-old down and tell her about nuclear arms. This is an invitation to check in with yourself, see how you are doing and don’t feel obligated to always answer fine when someone asks how you are.

Have you ever felt anxious and depressed? And did feeling that way make you feel more anxious and depressed? Did you think something was wrong with you? I did for a long time. Looking back, I have had intense periods of anxiety dating back to my teenage years. Some of our brains are just wired that way. It doesn’t make us damaged. It make us human.

We are not meant to be happy all the time. (Tweet it!)

It’s not the constant state of being for people. We have a full range of emotional experiences. And our emotions are subject to change all the time. As adults, one of the things we can strive for is even temperedness. Some people are more cheerful than others, some people more dramatic.

Not being clinically depressed or having an anxiety disorder, PTSD and other real and diagnosed issues. Those things are real and a constant battle to keep a daily equilibrium. Not of happy and skippy but just of putting one foot in front of another and getting through another day. That is a whole different kind of being that I would be happy to speak more about if the interest is there.

It is okay to be down

A little wallowing is good for the soul. It gives you time to consider or grieve or figure out what comes next. And if you are up all the time how are you going to be able to handle the down? Examining what is bringing you down is also a good exercise. Is it something outside of your control? Then letting go might be in order. Or is it an inside issue you are struggling with?

Life is challenging and if you are happy all the time regardless of your situation, is that really an honest way of being? I am not recommending telling your deepest darkest secrets to everyone who asks you how you are. I am saying be a little more honest with the people you are closest to. Lighten your emotional load by unburdening yourself to a trusted friend, family member or counsellor.

Coaching with Tamara Mendelson

Are you struggling through an unexpected life change? I’m now taking applications for 2018 Coaching and I’d love to hear from you! Sign up below to receive my coaching application form straight to your inbox.
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Here are 5 strategies to live a calmer and happier life:

1. Turn off the news.

Limit your exposure to one source once a day. There is nothing more damaging to those of us trying to live a gentler life than constant updates of world events we have no control over. And news is less about information and more about sensationalism. It’s meant to get a reaction so slow it down.

2. Limit your access to your devices.

Do you have to answer every text the minute it beeps on your smartphone? Those noise reminders are keyed into your nervous system so you feel compelled to answer. Turn off the bells and whistles. If you need to check in for work once an hour it is probably okay. If you have little kids, feel okay about where they are and how they are doing as often as you need to.

3. Stop comparing yourself and your family to anyone else’s.

Every family has its own drama. There is no such thing as normal. Do not begin sentences is your head like “If only we were…If only I was…” These are no win scenarios and they only lead to us feeling bad. No one knows exactly what goes on in other people’s families or lives. Normal doesn’t exist. Stop comparing. Facebook is the dressed up Sunday best of everyone’s lives. Don’t compare.

4. Get quiet long enough to figure out what you want.

Stay in that space until you can hear that voice in your head. Not the one that tells you negative things. Not the one that tries to keep you safe by keeping you from doing things that put you out there. But the voice that wants something different for you, that brave inner voice that helps you leave a bad job, a bad relationship, forgives you for being human.

5. Do something new.

Actually go somewhere new and try a new activity. Take a class. Take a walk. See new things. Fill up your experience cup. Dust off your dancing shoes and dance. Be happier.

Let me know how it goes.

If you want a little help, fill out an application and come work with me to lead a happier more calm life. I’m listening.

Coaching with Tamara Mendelson

Are you struggling through an unexpected life change? I’m now taking applications for 2018 Coaching and I’d love to hear from you! Sign up below to receive my coaching application form straight to your inbox.
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Be kind to yourself.

Now over to you: What pain do you live with? How do you handle it?