Editor’s Note: This is a guest post from Rose Lounsbury.
When I started my simplicity coaching business five years ago, one of my first speaking gigs involved talking to Girl Scouts about home organization. I developed a presentation called “How to Be An Organized Kid,” where I taught the two steps of being organized:
- Step 1 – Minimize!
- Step 2 – Organize!
I remember those cute little Girl Scouts, stepping along in place with me as we shouted out the steps.
As I’ve transitioned from focusing on decluttering my home to decluttering my life overall (including such slippery concepts as my time), it makes sense that I tried to fall back on my familiar 2-step system:
Step 1 – Minimize!
Step 2 – Organize!
The problem? This doesn’t work as well with time as it does with a cluttered closet.
I’ve always tried to organize my time. I’ve been a keeper of planners, both digital and paper, my entire life. I can’t go to bed without writing out a to-do list for the next day. I’ve read time management books and consumed copious podcasts on productivity. Heck, I’ve even taught classes on time management!
Why then, do I continue to struggle in this area? Why do I feel like every day is a battle with a never-ending to-do list that, like a zombie army, seems to regenerate each time I kill off one member?
This bothered me so much that I stopped teaching time management classes. It’s no fun to stand in front of a room and tell people how to manage their time when you feel like you’re barely holding it together.
But like many problems, this one unraveled itself in the shower. As I contemplated how many more minutes I could legitimately stand under the hot water before getting my kids up the other morning, I realized…
My old system of Step 1: MINIMIZE, followed by Step 2: ORGANIZE, was missing a key 3rd step: LET GO.
I never included this step when I taught the Girl Scouts because it wasn’t something I struggled with regarding my stuff. I could let go of stuff pretty easily. Old college newspaper articles I wrote? Don’t need ‘em. Too-tight jeans? Into the donation bag. Toys my kids have outgrown? Goodbye.
But when it comes to my time and commitments… ah, there’s the rub! It’s much harder for me to let go of things I want to do. And here’s why…
For most of my life, I’ve defined myself not by what I own, but by what I accomplish.
When I was a kid, I remember adults asking me that familiar question: What do you want to be when you grow up? It seemed like “becoming something” was the most important thing I had to figure out to enter the adult world. And I did.
I went to college and became a teacher. A respectable profession. It allowed me to easily answer the adult version of that childhood question, now asked over cocktails at fundraising events and in the present tense: So… what do you do?
I’ve always pinned my self-worth on doing and thus the more I do, the better I am.
There’s just one slight problem with that…
It’s not true.
My self-worth is not determined by what I do any more than by what I own.
I’ve just had 38 years of practice looking at it that way.
So… how does this relate to those Girl Scouts? I can still see them, stamping their feet and shouting:
Step 1: Minimize!
Step 2: Organize!
I wish I could go back in time and teach them what they really needed to know:
Step 3: LET GO
Because here’s what I’ve learned…
I can minimize my commitments. I can say no, I can say I’m too busy, I can flat-out refuse.
I can organize my time. Give me planners, apps, notebooks, sticky notes, and synced calendars galore.
But unless I learn to LET GO of the belief that what I do is equal to who I am, none of that matters.
So my task is not to say no more often. And it’s not to organize my time with color codes and time blocks and pinged reminders.
My task is to realize that who I am is irrelevant to all of that.
Who I am has always been worthy and valuable and important and no amount of to-do list crossing off can touch it. It’s the unshakable, never-changing, underlying part of me.
And the only thing worth crossing off my to-do list each day is to simply remember that.
***
Rose Lounsbury is a minimalism and simplicity coach, speaker, and author of the Amazon bestselling Less: Minimalism for Real. Rose spends her days speaking, writing, coaching her clients and online students to stuff-free freedom. Rose’s advice has been featured in USA Today, and she’s been a guest on Good Day Columbus, NPR, Good Morning Cincinnati, and Living Dayton. You can find her online at RoseLounsbury.com.
Kristy says
Beautiful post ? Thank you!
Phyllis says
Like this great piece and an important one too. I have always found it interesting that people always introduce themselves or are introduced with what they do and their qualification. It always feels like people need to have this front to hide behind but also instantly creates a yardstick to measure up to. Can we not accept ourselves and those we meet just as we are instead of what we should be?
James Jackson says
I think you meant “…all of that is irrelevant to who I am”….
Imagine how many of life’s lessons that you currently teach to others with confidence will be edited and modified when you turn 48!
Hey, at least you’ve figured out how to make a living at it, apparently.
Daniela says
I have totally adopted the skill of never asking anyone what they do for a living when we meet. I am a former corporate person worked for 15 years post college then opted out after our only child was born. I have been at home for over a decade and I cannot even begin to tell you daily how I am reminded by society that I am not worthy.
It is so heartbreaking but I do believe we are more than what we do. Thank you for sharing this -it is much appreciated.
Tom J. says
Years ago, as I was plodding along in my dead end job, I expressed my disappointment with the situation, especially the job, to an old family friend. I explained that after having spent years earning a couple of degrees, that I thought that things would have been better, that I would have gotten ahead. This old friend looked thoughtful for a moment and then looked at me and said, “Don’t confuse what you do for a living with who you are”. Wise words that I still remember.
As far as the job, I managed to move up the pay and seniority scale but never in position/rank. After watching several regime changes in the workplace and all of the accompanying drama, I can’t help but think that things might have turned out just fine anyway.
After all, my job is not who I am.
Peace.
Shaila says
I really liked this- I am myself and need not prove who I am by my achievements or explanation of what I do. This in itself gives self confidence and worth. Thanks
Gabrielle says
Thanks so much Rose. As a doer your blog really resonated with me and the letting go is a constant challenge but you’re right it doesn’t define who I am.
Daniel says
Wonderful article, I enjoyed it. Reminds me of Zen: the last effort to make is to forget about the effort at all.
Lauri says
This is such an important lesson to learn. Stopping pinning my self-worth on what I do allowed me to let go of a career that was 8 years in the schooling but was draining my life, and do something that is much lower pay but feeds my soul.
Edel says
I can totally see myself between your lines, Rose. As a mother of 6, I have come to the conclusion that there are only 2 things that need my attention: the physical and spiritual bread for my family. This is where I want to invest time in. Everything else is less important (for now). Thanks to the restricted life of corona quarantine and thanks to the inspiration of minimalism, I have realized how important it is to declutter my schedule, too….