The Power of Saying "No"
- Author Christy Geiger
- Published November 13, 2005
- Word count 683
We are in a season in which activities and demands are picking up.
There are more schedules to manage and more pulls on our time. In
general, we want to be helpful and accommodating to people. As a
result, we hate to say "No." People often do anything to avoid this
word: We will avoid people, redirect conversations, make excuses, be
non-committal, or simply say "Yes" to things we know we will have a
hard time following through on. The reality of the situation is that
we simply cannot do everything. When we keep saying "Yes" to things,
we are adding on more stuff to our plate, which causes stress,
frustration, and an overwhelmed feeling. Even though we would like to
answer "Yes" to everything, in order to have a peaceful life that
contains quality, balance and basic sanity, we must learn how to
say "No."
How do you do it? When you say "Yes" to a new activity, you have to
say "No" to remove something else that is already on your full plate.
Here is how:
- Be clear on your priorities and what is important.
If you are not clear, you will not have a compelling reason to
say "No" when you feel drawn to accept a new item on your plate. Try
to strike a balance with the Essential Eight: family, friends, work,
health, budgeting, fun, physical space (home, office, car), and
personal growth (spiritual, educational, personal development). For
example, for family, you could commit to spending five hours a day
taking care of your family and making sure their needs are met, and
for work you could commit to spending eight hours a day working on
projects that produce an income of $5000/month in order to provide
for your family.
- Set filters for each of your Essential Eight areas.
You want to list your Essential Eight in order of priority, and set a
filter for each (take the purpose/goal for each area and then be
clear on what fits and what does not). Take special note of the
proportion each area is getting. If priority one is family, two is
work, three is health, and you have committed 100% to work, with no
time allotted for family or for personal care, several negative
things will happen. Your health will suffer, which will then
jeopardize your physical ability to complete your work. Your family
will also interrupt and demand superhuman feats for you to squeeze
their needs onto your already full plate. These filters will help you
discern to what things you need to say "No" to in order to maintain
balance.
- Evaluate what is on your plate.
Considering each of the Essential Eight areas and your priorities,
determine what your needs are. Do you need it or not? Consider your
balance so you have some big projects (meat), some personal care
(veggies), some daily necessities (good grain/fillers), and a
hobby/fun thing (dessert). These are the things to which you are
saying "Yes!"
- Say "No" to the things that do not meet your filters.
These may be the least important things on your list, or new things
that come up in your life. Remember that whenever you say "Yes" to
something you are saying "No" to something else. If you say "Yes" to
a weekend project at work, you are saying "No" to your family time
that weekend (You may not have to specifically tell your family "No"
but that will be the result). If you say "Yes" to volunteer at the
evening carnival, you are saying "No" to your workout, which could
result in your being more tired and lethargic, and therefore less
productive the next day.
When you say "No" you have more power to say "Yes" to what is
important. Remember that "No" can mean "Never," but it can also
mean, "No, not right now." Let yourself have some space to do what is
important. You will experience the power of balance and boundaries,
which will result in you being more effective and productive. You
will enjoy less stress and more peace with your life.
Christy Geiger is a strategic planning coach and the owner of Synergy
Strategies, a business and life-coaching company that works with IBOs
and professionals to implement their thousands of great ideas in ways
that will maximize time, energy and effort! Through solid vision,
goal and strategy planning, clients are able to maximize their
personal effectiveness and accomplish their mission! Visit
http://www.synergystrategies.com
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