It’s Not As Bad As You Think. I Promise.
Alexis Haselberger
Helping busy professionals (+ teams) do more and stress less
Do you have a tendency to “ostrich”? (Yes, I’m turning this into a verb!) Do you stick your head in the proverbial sand when things start to feel busy, overwhelming or out of control?
Or perhaps you stick your fingers in your ears, metaphorically, and sing “La, la, la, I can’t hear you!” when stuff starts to pile up around you, or the influx of new tasks is just coming too fast.
If so, you certainly wouldn’t be alone.
I’ve found in my work with clients that “ostriching” is a pretty common phenomena, especially when it comes to your task system.
But, unfortunately, sticking your head in the sand is a temporary band-aid fix.
It’s a counterintuitive protection instinct.
It’s not actually resolving the core issue.
It’s solving for short term pain, but creating long term pain in the process.
You think you’re protecting yourself, but you’re actually just making things worse, compounding the problem.
Folks sometimes come into a session with me and share that they are feeling “behind”. They say that their task system is in “bad shape”. They might say they’re embarrassed to show me. (And that’s exactly when I remind them that we operate in a no-shame environment in my sessions and that progress is rarely linear…but I digress.)
When I ask for details, they can’t really tell me. They say it’s “bad” but they don’t really know how bad because they haven’t looked. They’ve been actively avoiding their task system and instead relying on memory. Not to mention letting that roaring wave of anxiety flood back in.
Ostriching is avoidance. And avoidance rarely makes the problem go away. In fact, avoidance doubles down on the problem.
When you avoid, you actually invoke the thing you're trying to avoid.
You avoid your task system because there’s too much to do, but while you’re avoiding, more stuff is piling up. And because you’re actively ignoring, it’s all jumbled together instead of prioritized.
The ignoring might feel good for a fleeting moment.
But then you remember that all that stuff you’re avoiding still exists.
Just because you can’t see it with your head in the sand doesn’t mean it’s disappeared.
But here’s the thing. It’s never as bad as you think. (And even if it were, more avoidance is simply going to make it worse.)
So, what do we do about it?
When a client comes into a session and it’s clear they’ve been ostriching, I always ask if they’d like to tackle their task system together to get it back into a forward state, where everything on their task list has a next action date of today or the future.
Usually, they say “yes” in a rush of visible relief.
It’s helpful to have someone hold your hand to steady you when you’re trying to extract your head from the sand.
But let’s say that you don’t have anyone to hold your hand. Let’s say you’ve got to muster the courage to pull your head out all by yourself.
What should you do when you notice your head edging towards that sand, or already deeply buried?
Well, it’s time to jerk your head back out of the sand, shake it off and open your eyes. Here’s how:
Now, whenever I do this with my clients, we almost invariably find 3 things:
Do you “ostrich”?
What do you do to get your head out of the sand?
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