Photo by Tim Bogdanov on Unsplash

3 Minutes to Ending Your Crazy Busy-ness

SK Camille

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The antidotes are simple, but you’ll need solid commitment.

The expert: Leadership coach Zena Everett helps executives and teams learn to set goals and priorities.

The main point: Crazy busy-ness usually stems from personality traits. To end it, you need to get real, get focused, and set boundaries.

According to leadership coach Zena Everett, the roots of busyness lie in four areas:

  • Perfectionism leads people to select low-priority tasks they feel confident of performing well, and avoid high-impact tasks that challenge them. Perfectionism can manifest as procrastination.
  • Failure to delegate results in an overwhelming amount of work on your own plate. It can stem from either a desire for control or insufficient trust.
  • Codependence can show up as caring for others to the extent that you neglect your own priorities, or as believing being super busy proves your worth. (Codependence can also translate into perfectionism and procrastination, because it can make failure or even just negative feedback feel intolerably uncomfortable — so you avoid challenging tasks.)
  • Lack of organization can result from a simple need to learn time and task management, or from information-processing differences. Specialized apps and using tools such…

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SK Camille

I cover general-interest professional topics in clear, actionable briefs. I also write about change, growth, and faith with warmth and optimism.