I rediscovered this poem in one of my iPEC coach training manuals.
I think we can all use this reminder once in a while.
Enjoy.
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I rediscovered this poem in one of my iPEC coach training manuals.
I think we can all use this reminder once in a while.
Enjoy.
***********************
I feel like there's a very subtle line between flakiness and doing what you need to take care of yourself.
I caught a glimpse of an article title that I think was called, "We Don't Know How To Phone It In." The blurb below indicating this was a quote from a band member of the Foo Fighters.
It immediately resonated with me.
This is definitely something I struggle with and am trying to improve at.
Though, I suppose I should specify that to me, 'phoning it in,' means pulling back, allowing imperfection, and being ok with shifting your priorities.
*Full disclosure - I didn't actually read the article, so the intended meaning could have been entirely different. But interpretation is an individual thing, so I'll continue!
Phoning it in is important - though my initial understanding of it came with a negative connotation.
It can be seen as a negative thing when phoning it in means you won't meet someone else's expectations (or your own).
But it can be seen as a positive thing when phoning it in means you recognize your own needs.
This is where I think the struggle really lies.
It's not about breaking your word or not following through.
It's about having a clear sense of your bandwidth and what you realistically can do given the energy you're working with.
How many times have you over committed to things?
I know I have.
And how many times have you felt bad because you had to break plans or your work suffered or you couldn't be fully present with the people you care about?
This happens to a LOT of people.
And believe it or not, it doesn't mean anything about the type of person that they are. It just shows that they are struggling to identify and prioritize their own needs.
So yeah, I would agree with the former 1/6 of the Foo Fighters - we don't know how.
But this doesn't mean we can't learn.
I feel compelled to go into how one would learn to 'phone it in' - or rather - avoid phoning it in by identifying and then prioritizing their own needs. But I think I'll save that for a different day.
In the meantime, maybe this will be of interest.
Or this.
Or possibly even this.
Transformations take time.
Change takes time.
And sometimes, it's easy to miss it entirely. Going completely unaware to the shifts that are taking root.
Take my beloved - yet elusive - beaver at North Pond.
I've seen it's art over the past few months, but I didn't think it had been further improved upon.
I made the assumption that things were exactly the same from when I first noticed them.
But this morning, something made me pause to check.
"Is that tree looking even more whittled down than last time I was here??"
Believe it or not I'd been absent for at least a week.
Then I went through the whole back and forth of believing myself and the intangible force that stopped me and doubting my inclinations.
So, I decided to look for the proof.
I searched my phone pics until I came upon the first documentation I had of the chewed on tree:
October 29th.
It was now December 7th. [Busted - I wrote this yesterday! 😜]
The proof was in the pudding. Behold!
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| Left image: Oct. 29 | Right image: Dec 7 |
Indeed, work had been done.
It seemed in just over a month, this tree was rapidly approaching Felling Day.
This is a good illustration of the importance of proof.
Not in the literal sense to prove something actually did or did not happen.
But in the sense that it is easy to gaslight ourselves, doubting or questioning our own thoughts and intuition.
Proof gives us an objective lens to view things from.
Granted, we need to be seeking information rather than a specific answer.
If I hadn't sought proof via a past photo I had taken, I would have likely settled on the thought that I was imagining things and the tree had always been that chewed up. When in fact, that wasn't the case at all.
Proof helps us to strengthen our trust in ourselves and our intuitive connections.
It's easy to shut down the random ideas that pop into our heads. The more we do this the more we block our own line of communication within ourselves.
And communicating with ourselves is important!
As Plato (and I'm sure many after him) once said,
"thinking is the talking of the soul with itself."
If we can't talk with ourselves, then we can't listen either. And listening is the core of everything.
So, next time you find yourself uncertain by your own thoughts do yourself a favor - get out of your head and look for the proof.