Do You Allow Busyness to Overtake Your Life After 50 and Beyond?

I was trying to plan an outing with
a friend I’d not seen in a while. But when I looked at my calendar, I realized
that my next window wasn’t for another month.

“I’m really sorry,” I
said. “October is insane. I’m afraid that’s the reality of being a freelancer.”

“No, it isn’t,” she
quipped. “That’s the reality of being Delia.”

Work First, Life Second

Although the comment stung, I knew
she was right. Much in the way that other people are addicted to their
phones or other, more nefarious substances, I’m addicted to busyness.

And the primary way that I make
myself busy is through work. I frequently work on weekends. I tell myself
that this is down to the “plight of the freelancer” – and there is
some truth to that – but I know that a lot of it is my own inability to stop
working.

I was really proud of myself
recently for carving out a three-hour window to see friends every Friday
evening between now and Christmas. I finish teaching at 4 o’clock on Fridays,
and I’m usually totally beat. So I thought, “Yes! That’s when I’ll
chill!”

I told another friend how excited I
was about finding this window for my social life.

“You and your windows!” she said, shaking her head. (Are you seeing a pattern here with my friends?)

My friend organizes her life around
seeing her friends and slots her work in around that. I do the reverse.

Fear of Death

I’d love to tell you that my endless busyness is driven by the fact that I’m a high-energy person. I am. And particularly now that I love my job, I don’t mind working extra hours when I need to. Work is fun.

But it runs much deeper than
that. There is a fear of the abyss – of how to deal with the thoughts and
fears that crop up when I don’t have 10,000 things to tick off my to-do
list. 

I worry that if I slow down, I won’t re-start. It is, at the end of the day, akin to a fear of death. In my mind, to stop moving is to stop being. And who am I without constant movement

This fear is particularly acute on Sundays, when I always feel like I’m right on the edge of a tidal wave of despair. But if I swim fast enough, I can just escape being swallowed up. Over the course of the day, what might have been depression morphs into a prickly disquietude. And I ward it off through work.

Paying It Forward 

When I was growing up, my mother
used to say, “I’m cold; put a sweater on.” It was her way of
projecting onto me her own needs.

I hate to say that I now do this with my own daughter. Except that instead of telling her to put a sweater on, I tell her to stop being so busy. My daughter does a gazillion after-school activities. (Apple, meet tree.) Her motto, which is emblazoned on a neon sign in her room, is “Vive la Vie!”

Unlike me, however, my daughter
isn’t busy because she’s fleeing something. For her, living life to the fullest
means never saying no.

If someone invites you to the
theater or to a bubble tea or to a political protest at the last minute, you
say “yes,” even if you’ve got a mound of homework to get through. She
doesn’t want to miss out on life’s experiences.

I admire this in her. Just like I
admire my friend who organizes her social life first and her work life second.

And yet, I am constantly
admonishing my daughter to do less. “You’re too busy!” I tell her.
“Slow down a bit!”

Who am I really talking to?

Vive la Vie

Not for the first time, I find myself taking life lessons from my recently turned-adult children. I think it’s time to put my money where her mouth is and vive my own vie.

Which is to say, it’s time for me
to let go of the fear and be OK with slowing down.

I won’t be able to do this overnight.
But I can start with Friday afternoons. Are you free for a coffee?

Let’s Have a Conversation:

How do you handle busyness in life and work? Do you have way too many commitments? What would be a good way to slow down and simply enjoy life? Please share in the comments below.

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