5 Steps To Move Out Of Stagnancy In Life
In the journey of growth, there are times when we grow and excel. We are endlessly driven and hyped up, motivated to get our goals.
Then there are times when we stagnate. We feel uninspired and unmotivated. We keep procrastinating on our plans. More often than not, we get out of a rut, only to get back into another one.
How do you know if you are stagnating? Here are some tell-tale signs:
- If you have been experiencing chronic procrastination on your goals
- If you don’t ever feel like doing anything
- If you keep turning to sleep, eating, games, mindless activities and entertainment for comfort
- If you know you should be doing something, but yet you keep avoiding it
- If you have not achieved anything new or significant now relative to 1 month, 2 months or 3 months ago
- If you have a deep sense of feeling that you are living under your potential
When
we face stagnation in life, it’s a sign of deeper issues. Stagnation,
just like procrastination, is a symptom of a problem. It’s easy to beat
ourselves over it, but this approach is not going to help. Here, I will
share 5 steps to help you move out of this stagnation. They won’t
magically transform your life in 1 night (such changes are never
permanent because the foundations are not built), but they will help you
get the momentum going and help you get back on track.
1. Realize you’re not alone
Everyone
stagnates at some point or another. You are not alone in this and more
importantly, it’s normal. In fact, it’s amazing how many of my clients
actually face the same predicament, even though all of them come from
different walks of life, are of different ages, and have never crossed
paths. Realizing you are not alone in this will make it much easier to
deal with this period. By trying to “fight it”, you’re only fighting
yourself. Accept this situation, acknowledge it, and tell yourself it’s
okay. That way, you can then focus on the constructive steps that will
really help you.
2. Find what inspires you
Stagnation
comes because there isn’t anything that excites you enough to take
action. If you don’t have a habit of setting goals, and instead just
leave yourself to daily mundanes, it’s not surprising you are
experiencing stagnation. What do you want to do if there are no
limitations? If you can have whatever you want, what will it be? The
answers to these questions will provide the fuel that will drive you
forward.
On
the other hand, even if you are an experienced goal setter, there are
times when the goals you set in the past lose their appeal now. It’s
normal and it happens to me too. Sometimes we lose touch with our goals,
since we are in a different emotional state compared to when we first
set them. Sometimes our priorities change and we no longer want to work
on those goals anymore. However, we don’t consciously realize this, and
what happens is we procrastinate on our goals until it compounds into a
serious problem. If that’s the case for you, it’s time to relook into
your goals. There’s no point in pursuing goals that no longer inspire
you. Trash away your old goals (or just put them aside) and ask yourself
what you really want now. Then go for them.
3. Give yourself a break
When’s
the last time you took a real break for yourself? 3 months? 6 months? 1
year? Never? Perhaps it’s time to take a time-out. Prolonged working
can cause someone to become disillusioned as they lose sight of who they
are and what they want.
Go
take some extended leave from work. A few days at bare minimum; a few
weeks or months will be great. Some of my ex-colleagues have quit their
jobs and took months out to do some self-reflection. Of course, some of
us might not have that luxury, so we can stick to a few weeks of leave.
Go on a trip elsewhere and get away from your work and your life. Use
this chance to get a renewed perspective of life. Think about your life
purpose, what you want and what you want to create for your life in the
future. These are big questions that require deep thinking over them.
It’s not about finding the answers at one go, but about taking the first
step to finding the answers.
4. Shake up your routines
Being
in the same environment, doing the same things over and over again and
meeting the same people can make us stagnant. This is especially if the
people you spend the most time with are stagnant themselves.
Change
things around. Start with simple things, like taking a different route
to work and eating something different for breakfast. Have your lunch
with different colleagues, colleagues you never talked much with. Work
in a different cubicle if your work has free and easy seating. Do
something different than your usual for weekday evenings and weekends.
Cultivate different habits, like exercising every day, listening to a
new series of podcasts every morning to work, reading a book, etc
(here’s 6 Proven Ways To Make New Habits Stick). The different contexts will give you different stimulus, which will trigger off different thoughts and actions in you.
When
I’m in a state of stagnancy, I’ll get a sense of what’s making me
stagnate. Sometimes it’s the environment I’m in, sometimes it’s the
people I’ve been hanging out with, sometimes it’s my lifestyle. Most of
the times it’s a combination of all these. Changing them up helps to
stir myself out of the stagnant mode.
5. Start with a small step
Stagnation
also comes from being frozen in fear. Maybe you do want this certain
goal, but you aren’t taking action. Are you overwhelmed by the amount of
work needed? Are you afraid you will make mistakes? Is the
perfectionist in you taking over and paralyzing you?
Let go of the belief that it has to be perfect.
Such a belief is a bane, not a boon. It’s precisely from being open to
mistakes and errors that you move forward. Break down what’s before you
into very very small steps, then take those small steps, a little step
at a time. I had a client who had been stagnating for a long period
because he was afraid of failing. He didn’t want to make another move
where he would make a mistake. However, not wanting to make a mistake
has led him to do absolutely nothing for 2-3 years. On the other hand,
by doing just something, you would already be making progress, whether
it’s a mistake or not. Even if you make a supposed “mistake”, you get
feedback to do things differently in the next step. That’s something you
would never have known if you never made a move.Source: https://www.lifehack.org
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