Busy? Get in line.

If I ever tell you that, “I’m so sorry that I’ve been too busy to…” then… please call me on it.

Of course I’m busy. That’s life. That’s my life. That’s most people’s lives. Grown up lives tend to be… full. Add kids, or business start-ups, or illness into the mix and you have… much more of life to be busy about.

“I’m just so busy,” is the typically gasping, rushed refrain that’s become a contemporary anthem. It doesn’t make us look more important, it makes us look just-this-side-of-frazzled.

It’s typically used as a lite apology, an excuse, a duck-out, as if your Life Master is making you do stuff that you don’t want to do. Even as a well-intended social pleasantry, “Sorry, I’ve been busy,” has a little hard-done-by ring to it.

Whatever is on your plate got there because you said yes to it—in the fullness of ambition and desire and wanting to eat life whole.

Caveat. Of course there are always exceptions to every theory—real tragedies and setbacks happen. What I’m discussing here is how we normalize our addiction to busy lifestyles and how we frame it with our language.

Sometimes we take on to-do’s and commit to climb mountains because our soul demands it. Sometimes life throttles us with unforeseen and unrelenting demands. Sometimes busyness is the result of keeping up with the Joneses. Busy can be healthy. Busy can be sickness. But busy is most often a choice.

“Sorry, I’ve been busy,” sometimes we say this to please other people who are busy-bodies. You know, the kind of people who text you to see if you got their email. We’re trying to use mutual busyness as a way of connecting. It’s not entirely a bad thing. Wanting to connect is a healthy, gorgeous impulse. Let’s just do it in a healthier way.

REFRAME

So what do we say to others when we can’t fit another meeting or event into our calendar, or when we have to send regrets, or pass on an opportunity? Tell them the truth. Report on life, rather than whining about it. Deliver it with ease. Don’t pass on any frantic energy. Say it with pride if you’re inclined. “Been travelling a lot for work. It’s tax season. The start-up is all consuming right now. I carved out a lot of time to be with my guy… woman… family… Higher Self… imaginary friend. Netflix.” Let people meet you in your clear truth rather than your apologetic panic. You set the stress level when you set the tone.

And sometimes, many times, you don’t need to excuse yourself at all. Just show up, no explanations or apologies. Present and accountable. We all understand.

Peace,

Danielle


 

Danielle LaPorte is an invited member of Oprah’s SuperSoul 100, a group who, in Oprah Winfrey’s words, “is uniquely connecting the world together with a spiritual energy that matters.” She is author of White Hot Truth: Clarity for keeping it real on your spiritual path—from one seeker to another. The Fire Starter Sessions, and The Desire Map: A Guide To Creating Goals With Soul—the book that has been translated into 8 languages, evolved into a yearly day planner system, a top 10 iTunes app, and an international workshop program with licensed facilitators in 15 countries. Named one of the “Top 100 Websites for Women” by Forbes, millions of visitors go to DanielleLaPorte.com every month for her daily #Truthbombs and what’s been called “the best place online for kickass spirituality.” A speaker, a poet, a painter, and a former business strategist and Washington-DC think tank exec, Entrepreneur Magazine calls Danielle, “equal parts poet and entrepreneurial badass…edgy, contrarian…loving and inspired.” Her charities of choice are Eve Ensler’s VDay: a global movement to end violence against women and girls, and charity: water, setting out to bring safe drinking water to everyone in the world. She lives in Vancouver, BC with her favourite philosopher, her son. You can find her @daniellelaporte and just about everywhere on social media.