See if this cycle sounds familiar:
Does this mean I'm insane? There's that adage that says "the definition of insanity is doing the same thing again and again, hoping for different results", and I guess by that light I might be a little crazy sometimes.
But guess what? I may have broken (or at least tweaked) the cycle this time: After intensely busy months in August and September (step 1), work slowed down significantly after all the weddings in early of October (step 2). I relaxed for a minute, got bored, and started looking for choirs and other activities to join (step 3). But I didn't get any farther than scheduling an audition for a new men's choir in DC before two things happened. First, it occurred to me that if singing in a choir that rehearses across the street from my apartment is too demanding, then singing in a choir that would require significant travel would only be worse. Second, I got distracted with other fun opportunities; namely, two new gym memberships (one at the Sculpt yoga/cycling studio, and one at the nearby Crossfit) and a seven-week Intro to Ballet class on Saturday mornings. That's the direction I took -- in a fit of moderation, I signed up for all three.
So I'm still in step 3, but this time the mix of activities is different in important ways. Unlike musical groups, which require consistent, long-term commitment to a group of people and regular off-day practicing, and marathon training, which requires fairly strict adherence to a plan, these other activities are flexible, day-to-day commitments to myself (there's a social element, but the others aren't relying on me) that can be scaled up or down depending on other pressures. I'm hoping these differences will permit me to maintain step 4 for longer and avoid crashing in step 5.
The proof, of course, will be in the pudding. I've been staffed on a new M&A deal that will take off this week (because of course it will -- I'm trying to take next week off!), so I will officially be back in step 4 before I know it. Here's hoping I'm not insane!
- I'm soul-crushingly busy at work. No time for socializing, sleep or food.
- Work lightens up. I relax, catch up on sleep, see people.
- Two or three days later, I'm bored out of my mind, so I join three choirs, start training for a marathon, plan dinner parties at my house, enroll in piano lessons, schedule dentist appointments, and start talking about finding an apartment downtown DC.
- Then I take on more work and everything is perfect: I've got an awesome high-powered job, plus I'm doing everything else that I want to do. I feel like superman.
- Somewhere between four and eight weeks later, things fall apart. Work is again soul-crushingly demanding; I fall behind in my rehearsals, socializing, training, household chores, sleep. I'm back to step 1.
Does this mean I'm insane? There's that adage that says "the definition of insanity is doing the same thing again and again, hoping for different results", and I guess by that light I might be a little crazy sometimes.
But guess what? I may have broken (or at least tweaked) the cycle this time: After intensely busy months in August and September (step 1), work slowed down significantly after all the weddings in early of October (step 2). I relaxed for a minute, got bored, and started looking for choirs and other activities to join (step 3). But I didn't get any farther than scheduling an audition for a new men's choir in DC before two things happened. First, it occurred to me that if singing in a choir that rehearses across the street from my apartment is too demanding, then singing in a choir that would require significant travel would only be worse. Second, I got distracted with other fun opportunities; namely, two new gym memberships (one at the Sculpt yoga/cycling studio, and one at the nearby Crossfit) and a seven-week Intro to Ballet class on Saturday mornings. That's the direction I took -- in a fit of moderation, I signed up for all three.
So I'm still in step 3, but this time the mix of activities is different in important ways. Unlike musical groups, which require consistent, long-term commitment to a group of people and regular off-day practicing, and marathon training, which requires fairly strict adherence to a plan, these other activities are flexible, day-to-day commitments to myself (there's a social element, but the others aren't relying on me) that can be scaled up or down depending on other pressures. I'm hoping these differences will permit me to maintain step 4 for longer and avoid crashing in step 5.
The proof, of course, will be in the pudding. I've been staffed on a new M&A deal that will take off this week (because of course it will -- I'm trying to take next week off!), so I will officially be back in step 4 before I know it. Here's hoping I'm not insane!
1 comment:
I'll keep my fingers crossed for you! Lady
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