Talking through the burnout.

And yes, I’m talking to myself.

What is needed?

What do you need, sweetie?

More stopping.

More going dark.

More hiding.

Acknowledging the hard. And finding the useful.

What is useful here?

Obviously, burnout sucks. Without having to appreciate the burnout or be grateful for it because that would just be annoying, what is useful about having reached this extreme state of it?

Well, I can take notes about what it’s like, and and put them in the Book of Me.

When I plan things for future me, I can build in time for unexpected craziness.

And I can seed vacations. Plant them into the calendar. But actually take them. Not like the ones that are on my calendar now that just get ignored.

Also holidays that come before the work and not just after.

Schedule in both planning time and down time. Time for being OFF.

Teacher me needs to be rested and replenished before running events. She needs to be alone.

She needs to be thoroughly rested and cared for. To retreat into a cocoon and emerge new and refreshed. It’s a better for what is being taught to come into the world.

Now is not then. So how is now not then?

This state of intense wiped-out over-done tired is really reminding you of your last teaching trip to Berlin two years ago when you fell apart completely. Except it’s not like then. How is now different from then?

That burnout came from weeks of endless auditory and energetic assault on my senses, along with a number of extremely stressful and problematic situations that were beyond my control.

This round, on the other hand, comes from working too much at things I love that are highly successful. Different.

That burnout happened during a much bigger transition period, in a time of (perceived, at least) considerably less support.

The infrastructure wasn’t there. We thought we were going to have to leave Hoppy House. We didn’t know what was coming next. Everything was shaky and up in the air.

And I didn’t know anywhere near as much about how to take care of myself. I didn’t have my morning rituals and my stopping rituals. So the falling apart was that much more violent and drastic.

Now we have so much more stability and sovereignty.

Imagine. What will you say about today?

One day you will look back on these past weeks as the thing that changed everything in your life for the better. Why?

Hmmm. So this is how and when I learned to really and truly re-charge. And also to plan things to require less recharging.

The genius thing that is pre-vacation so you start everything super-relaxed? That came from this.

This is where I figure out the transitions. This is where I learn to respect my capacity and to over-estimate rather than under-estimate the amount of down time that is needed to do what I want to do in the world.

What happens once this shift has been made?

Once you know how to care for yourself, what happens to you and in your life?

I laugh more. I apologize less.

My teaching becomes even more grounded. I maintain boundaries better. I’m less worn out.

It’s easier for me to promote the next event because I’m not secretly wishing for a magical month of time off.

Recovery times get both easier and shorter.

I am full of love for what I do, not just while I’m doing it but before and after too.

Going on holiday isn’t about exhaustion, but about pleasure. Note: this concept is blowing the top of my head off, so I am going to need to sit with this some more.

Apparently my fuzzball monsters have some serious objections to the idea of doing anything for pleasure. But I’m also getting that the more I take this time for me, the less my monsterlets show up.

Because it’s only when I’m worn out and vulnerable like this that I start to think maybe they’re right about things. Interesting.

And comment zen in the comment blanket fort.

You are welcome to grab a cushion and play if you want.

You can answer any of the questions I came up with or make up your own. You can talk to exhausted you or past you or slightly future you.

You can sit around and listen. Whatever you like.

As always: we all have our stuff. We’re all working on our stuff. We give people room to have their own experience and to that end, we don’t give unsolicited advice.

xox

The Fluent Self