So many people embark on projects to make changes in their
lives, only to get detoured or bogged down in the numerous
other things that are in their lives. These can be physical
blocks, such as a cluttered living room or kitchen but they
can also be emotional issues, mental clarity or personal
relationships. Here is a 10-point guide to simplifying your
life of the obstacles that stand between you and fulfillment
of your vision.
1. Empty Your Brain
If you're feeling overwhelmed and stressed out, it can be
liberating to empty your brain of your internal "to-do" list
and emotional baggage. Hire a coach to verbalize all the
things you have to do, haven't done, and the feelings that
go along with all of that.
You can also lighten your mental load by writing down or
journaling the stuff that is taking up mind space. At this
point, you don't have to take any action on it. The
objective is to clear it from your head. It frees up your
brain so you can then start planning and taking action with
more clarity and less negativity.
2. Get Rid of the Human Vampires
Eliminate relationships that are sucking the energy out of
you. Even if they are family members that you cannot avoid
altogether, take steps to limit your time with them and set
boundaries around what activities you allow them to engage
you in.
Be honest in your evaluation. Who is helping you and who is
dragging you down? Who is eating up your time and giving
nothing back? Who makes you feel good, supported and
energized? Anyone who adds value to your life stays in and
everybody else goes away.
3. Lighten Your Heart
Getting closure on the past and relationships can unburden
you of emotional baggage that is weighing down your heart
and spirit. Forgive and forget. Let it go. Call that person
up or write them a letter you never send, but get over it.
Work with a mental health professional if necessary but you
can't move on if you're stuck in yesterday. Why continue to
rob yourself of tomorrow by living in the past?
4. Clean House
A big part of simplifying is to de-clutter your physical
landscape. Start with one small area like the kitchen
counter or junk drawer and finish it in one shot. Focus your
energy on this one space; don't think about the messy garage
or bedroom closet.
You can even invest extras into your small project such as
putting in a drawer liner or organizing tray. This may
encourage you to protect it from future clutter. It's
important to come up with a system as you organize and also
to take steps to prevent clutter from even coming into your
home. You can contact catalog companies and ask to be
removed from their mailing lists, enroll in online billing
and take other proactive steps to keep the clutter inflow to
a minimum.
5. Get a Healthy Body
While you are getting rid of the junk around your house,
examine your eating and health habits and start eliminating
the junk there, too. Along with limiting caffeine, sugar and
alcohol, look at eliminating junk food, tobacco and any
other thing that ages, erodes, clogs up or adds weight to
your body and puts your health at risk.
It's also good to update your personal appearance. Are you
still sporting an '80s haircut or wearing clothes you bought
five or ten years ago? It's time to upgrade!
6. Clear Out Your Debt
Stop impulse buying and start paying off your credit cards.
Establish a budget and start living within your means. Can
you imagine all of the free time you'll gain when you are
not worrying about money? No more shopping around for credit
and transfer balance deals. No more writing out checks or
purchasing money orders. No more avoiding phone calls from
creditors and lawyers. No more feeling guilty. Talk about
freedom!
7. Simplify Your Language
Try to speak honestly and directly with courtesy and
kindness. Don't use whiny and apologetic language to ask for
what you want. ("I wonder if I could possibly persuade you
to…") Quit overusing jargon and slang such as "put that baby
to bed", "let's throw it on the wall and see what sticks",
"out of the loop", and "lock and load." Eliminate euphemisms
and toss out denials ("Just because he is sleeping with
another woman doesn't mean he doesn't love me.").
Get rid of the swear words, hostile comments, and the idea
that you must voice your opinion about everything. Throw
your judgment of others to the wayside.
8. Learn to say NO
It was probably one of the first words you ever learned so
why are you having so much difficulty using it now? Use it!
It's your life, your time, your resources and you have the
absolute right to use it as you see fit. Don't feel you have
to explain, excuse or justify saying "no" to office
observers, gossips or nosy individuals.
9. Limit Tradition
Tradition is wonderful so long as it doesn't run your life.
If a tradition has lost its meaning or purpose and is just a
timewaster, then get rid of it. When anyone says "but we've
always done it this way", figure out why. If it no longer
makes sense, then feel free to walk away or change it.
10. Make Time for You
Time is tight for most of us. Make a decision that you will
set aside time that is just for you. Start with 15 minutes a
day if that's all you can find. Lock your door, turn off the
phone, or whatever it takes, but it's important to create a
space where you can focus on only you. Meditate, pray, write
in a journal or eat an apple. Whatever you want to do with
your time, do it.