How do you ever had one of those weeks where you fit so much into your week,
Speaker:that you haven't had any time to yourself?
Speaker:You're feeling utterly exhausted, and you've got to get up to all over again.
Speaker:You've got loads of stuff going on in the evening, you've committed to far too much.
Speaker:I have those sorts of weeks all the time.
Speaker:But this last week, I've had a lot of conference talks, which I love to
Speaker:doing, but I was slightly worried.
Speaker:I'd fit too much into the week.
Speaker:But I found myself waking up one morning in a hotel where the conference
Speaker:was having gone down the night before and not try to squeeze everything in.
Speaker:And I just thought to myself, Thank you.
Speaker:Thank you past self.
Speaker:Uh, having thought about the fact it would be a bridge too far to get up mega
Speaker:mega rarely and try and fit all this in.
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Speaker:One of my daughters has just finished her A Levels and she
Speaker:received a very surprising letter through the post the other day.
Speaker:It was the letter that she'd written in year seven when she
Speaker:first went to secondary school.
Speaker:And they had kept this letter and it arrived.
Speaker:At the end of year 13.
Speaker:Oh, it was so thoughtful of them.
Speaker:And in this letter there was advice from her past self to her future
Speaker:self, just about security university, telling her how to live, what her 12
Speaker:year old self really, really wanted.
Speaker:It was really cute.
Speaker:And we often use this in coaching.
Speaker:We often sort of write a letter to our future self., talking about what we'd
Speaker:like to achieve, thinking about what our goals are, setting goals maybe
Speaker:for years, time or five years time.
Speaker:One of the coaching exercises, which can be quite helpful is
Speaker:actually looking backwards.
Speaker:And there is one exercise in which you write your own a bitchery or
Speaker:if he wants to make it a bit less, morbid, you actually think about
Speaker:what you'd like people to say about you on your retirement do.
Speaker:And this got me thinking about how can we do that a little bit more short-term?
Speaker:Because it's one thing sort of setting goals and working out what we want
Speaker:to achieve next week or next month or in a year or in five years time.
Speaker:That's very goal orientated.
Speaker:It's quite difficult thinking about how we'd like to feel.
Speaker:And I've been thinking about how we stop ourselves over-scheduling and overbooking.
Speaker:And I thought back to the week I've just had, and the fact that me being the
Speaker:future self was so grateful to my past self for not over-scheduling, for being
Speaker:kind for booking a hotel room and making sure I didn't have to get up mega rarely.
Speaker:And so one of our communities, we were thinking about how to put your needs
Speaker:first as a doctor and what the best thing you can do to help yourself do that.
Speaker:And we came up with this concept of writing a letter from your
Speaker:future self to your present self, thanking them for meeting their
Speaker:needs and putting their needs first.
Speaker:And I was really surprised by the reaction from the community.
Speaker:We throw out all sorts of tips and techniques and suggestions, but
Speaker:the one thing that people loved was this letter from your future self.
Speaker:I think this is a form of practicing self-compassion in advance, SCIA,
Speaker:and I'm wondering if it's something that we need to do a lot more often.
Speaker:I have some friends that are really good at this.
Speaker:They're really good at setting boundaries.
Speaker:They're really good at thinking actually, I can't see more
Speaker:than two things that week.
Speaker:I know I'm going to be really strung out.
Speaker:And there are some people that can really predict that.
Speaker:Now, I'm an Enneagram seven, which means I have massive FOMO, fear of missing out.
Speaker:I want to experience everything.
Speaker:I want to do everything.
Speaker:And I always think I can fit just that one more thing in, which
Speaker:was fine when I was younger.
Speaker:I got older, I find I can do less than less, particularly in the evenings.
Speaker:I can't do more than two nights out in a week.
Speaker:And I really, really struggle if I don't have any downtime or any thinking time.
Speaker:I also hate letting people down.
Speaker:I hate saying no to things.
Speaker:Basically, because I don't want to miss out.
Speaker:And so I over commit to stuff and I say yes to everything because I wanted to it.
Speaker:But I don't think about what is the future me.
Speaker:Gonna thank me for.
Speaker:The present me thinks Ah, future me will cope.
Speaker:Yeah, that's a bit of a heavy wheat, but it'll be okay.
Speaker:But if I don't consider what the future me needs, it means
Speaker:I book stuff up back to back.
Speaker:It means I think I can get home from holiday at midnight and then
Speaker:start work at 8:00 AM the next day.
Speaker:Oh, I can cope with that.
Speaker:I'll keep with that.
Speaker:At the time.
Speaker:It means I run out of energy and I don't manage my energy, which
Speaker:we know is a finite resource.
Speaker:And depletes as we get older, certainly.
Speaker:It means I won't manage my energy properly.
Speaker:I wouldn't have enough energy for the people I love, and it also means that it's
Speaker:very, very difficult to take into account any unforeseen stuff that crops up.
Speaker:So many of my friends at the moment are dealing with elderly relatives who
Speaker:are falling ill or crises with kids or other stuff that just crops up from
Speaker:left field when we least expect it.
Speaker:If we book stuff into our day back to back to back and fill up every single slot,
Speaker:not only is it really detrimental to our own energy, but it means that there's no
Speaker:buffer when these unforeseen events occur.
Speaker:And the only thing that we can say is definitely true about unforeseen
Speaker:events is that they will always happen.
Speaker:But if we really did start to think about what my future self needs and
Speaker:what my future self will thank me for.
Speaker:It will prevent us just over-scheduling our diary.
Speaker:It will help us predict some of those tough runs and those
Speaker:tough things that are coming up.
Speaker:And in the long run, it will produce a feeling of calm, you'll know
Speaker:you've got capacity for stuff, and because you've got that buffer.
Speaker:You'll be able to be spontaneous and say yes to things that arise last minutes,
Speaker:and could be going away with a friend for a weekend, or it could be taking on
Speaker:an extra project or doing that talk or helping someone out that you wanted to do.
Speaker:If we book ourselves up in advanced and pack our lives to capacity, we will never
Speaker:have the time to do those sorts of things.
Speaker:So how do we look after our future self?
Speaker:Well, a few tips, firstly, big rocks first.
Speaker:And I've thought about this before in the podcast.
Speaker:I remember seeing a talk where someone got a big glass jar and they filled this big
Speaker:glass jar with three or four big rocks.
Speaker:They then filled it with some pebbles.
Speaker:They then put a bit of gravel in, they then put some sand in and then they filled
Speaker:up with water, and the job was totally full They then tipped it all out again.
Speaker:And this time they'd put the sand in first, then put the gravel in, and there
Speaker:was no room for the big rocks because all the space had been taken up already.
Speaker:So the moral of the story is put the big rocks in first.
Speaker:So what other really big, important things to you?
Speaker:Friends, family, some aspects of your work there might be a hobby that's
Speaker:really, really important to you.
Speaker:There might be a project that you want to do.
Speaker:I know, write a book or something.
Speaker:But get those things in first.
Speaker:I remembered a couple of years ago, I booked this Hennis campaign over
Speaker:the summer and I absolutely loved it.
Speaker:So I did the same again this year.
Speaker:When I got to it this year.
Speaker:I remember thinking Oh my goodness, there is no way.
Speaker:I would have put that in right now because I feel too busy.
Speaker:I feel like there's so much stuff I need to see, but I just got back from holiday.
Speaker:But I'd put it in and I did it and I had such a brilliant time.
Speaker:But because I put it in first above anything else, I did it and I enjoyed it.
Speaker:Because work will always expand to fill the time available.
Speaker:It just will.
Speaker:So get those big rocks in.
Speaker:Get those big, important things that you know take some time, you know that
Speaker:takes some time, effort and energy.
Speaker:And your future self will thank you for that.
Speaker:Then after you've got your big rocks, don't pack all the little rocks around it.
Speaker:Leave some time and space.
Speaker:Secondly, you could try making some rules for yourself.
Speaker:You know, what rules would your future self like you to write
Speaker:down and understand right now?
Speaker:Is it I can only manage to go out twice a week.
Speaker:I can only manage a late night once a week.
Speaker:I need to have a complete two day break once a month.
Speaker:I need one afternoon off every couple of weeks in which afternoon
Speaker:I will go and do X, Y or Z.
Speaker:What are the rules that you can have for yourself?
Speaker:What are the rules?
Speaker:That mean you're going to say no to certain things.
Speaker:So it's just automatic.
Speaker:You've already planned that in advance.
Speaker:That can be incredibly helpful.
Speaker:It might be a real, such as I can have one social engagement on a Sunday.
Speaker:I might go out for brunch with a friend, or I might have an evening meal, but
Speaker:actually I can't see brunch and an evening meal because that means I get no downtime.
Speaker:Thirdly, I suggest that you look back over the last few years and identify
Speaker:times when you know that you were close to the edge in terms of capacity, where you
Speaker:felt overstretched, where you felt, oh, I've just put too much in here, and you
Speaker:felt quite resentful that you'd done it.
Speaker:So you felt resentful towards your past self rather than thankful.
Speaker:And think what are those pinch points?
Speaker:Because, you know, I know for example, that every September
Speaker:we have three birthdays.
Speaker:People always start school.
Speaker:It's a new sort of business year, blah, blah, blah.
Speaker:There's all these things going on.
Speaker:And it's a complete nightmare.
Speaker:And I always wonder why it ended up feeling completely overwhelmed by the time
Speaker:October comes, because I also try and go away from my birthday and go on nights
Speaker:out, etc, etc, there is just no time.
Speaker:It happens every single year, so I can predict it.
Speaker:So these regular things that come up.
Speaker:Christmas, for example, is always, for me, quite a busy time,
Speaker:with lots of different family commitments, lots of stuff going on.
Speaker:And I always have a bit myself and I know that that's going to happen.
Speaker:What if I actually booked some downtime when I know that I'm not
Speaker:going to over-commit to seeing friends or relatives or anything like that?
Speaker:Side note, last Christmas I had broken my ankle.
Speaker:And every time our guests, whether it be family or friends or whatever,
Speaker:went for a nice walk, say a Boxing Day walk, I couldn't go with them.
Speaker:But I was out of plaster by then.
Speaker:And what I could do was go to the gym and walk up and down the swimming
Speaker:pool, because that's what my sort of therapist has said I needed to do.
Speaker:Now, it was amazing just having those odd hours of time over the Christmas period
Speaker:when I was on my own, just to do a little bit of exercise and I, I went and sat in
Speaker:the spa afterwards for a cheeky half hour, that transforms how I felt over Christmas.
Speaker:So now I'm thinking actually, how can I put that in this Christmas
Speaker:without breaking my leg, obviously don't want to do that again.
Speaker:But they're things that I can do that that would help in just that way.
Speaker:So look back at all the pinch points that happen regularly, that's
Speaker:happened over the last year and you can predict what's going to happen.
Speaker:And then finally, there might be some stuff coming up that
Speaker:you know is going to be tough.
Speaker:This year, I had both children doing GCSEs and A Levels, and I'd predicted
Speaker:that actually that was going to be quite a tough time for our family, and
Speaker:I just needed to give some space and some time to cope with the emotions, to
Speaker:cope with the work, to support the kids.
Speaker:And I did make sure that there wasn't too much on.
Speaker:And my present self was very grateful to my past self.
Speaker:For the facts I'd done that.
Speaker:But this is all common sense, but why is it we hardly ever do it?
Speaker:Why is it that we don't have compassion on our future self?
Speaker:We just think, Ah, they'll be able to do it, they can fit it in.
Speaker:So we often think about what goals who wants to hit in the
Speaker:future, what we want to achieve.
Speaker:Can I suggest we stop for a moment and think of our future selves and how we
Speaker:want them to feel and write a letter?
Speaker:Write a letter to your current self from your future self, thanking you for making
Speaker:sure there is always time and space.
Speaker:Thanking you for making sure that you have put some boundaries in which
Speaker:means that you're not over committed.
Speaker:For some self-compassion in advance and for looking after your future needs.
Speaker:Believe me.
Speaker:You'll get there.
Speaker:You'll think thank goodness I did that.
Speaker:And when you're tempted to overbook, just stop yourself and say, what
Speaker:would future me, thank me for?
Speaker:And keep that as a mantra.
Speaker:And that will help you to say no to the myriad of opportunities that you think
Speaker:you ought to do, or that you wants to do, and just keep your energy in check and
Speaker:make sure that you have time to be self compassionate, to look after yourself.
Speaker:Your future self will thank you.