Time Management Tuesday: The Power of No
No is a word that can liberate our time and free us to focus on what matters most. It is a powerful word when it is applied to the right situations and for the right reasons.
Many times, the greatest challenge in learning to manage our time is learning when to say no to the things that are not for us so that we have time to say yes to what is.
No Is Our Friend
No is not our enemy. It is our friend. We must embrace no and welcome the boundaries it represents.
These boundaries restore our peace and reclaim our sanity. They prevent our efforts from being watered down across too many commitments.
They ensure that we are making time for love in our lives, and for the friendships, the family, and the other things that add lasting value. It is a word that will, if we allow it, protect us from being used and abused by those who might take advantage of our generosity or misinterpret our willingness to help others as a license to enslave us to their own desires.
No Must Be Handled with Care
If no is abused or used in the wrong circumstances, it will create stagnation in our lives and prevent us from pursuing our dreams. It can become easy to say no to ourselves and yes to everyone else, but if we do this we are allowing no to become a tyrant and an abuser rather than a friend and an ally.
Discerning When To Say No
There are several questions we should ask ourselves before saying yes to anything. Asking these questions will help us discern the reasons behind our desire to say no and prevent us from saying no to the things we should be saying yes to or saying yes to things we ought to be saying no to.
Every time we say yes to things we don't want in life, we are squeezing out of our lives time we could be spending on love.
1. Am I answering out of a desire to avoid a conflict?
If what I'm saying is given out of a desire to avoid a conflict, this isn't going to create true peace in my life. It's likely to foster resentment on my part and it's unfair to the other party because I am not giving them an opportunity to get to know me better and to understand what matters to me and what doesn't. I need to be willing to fight for what matters to me even if it's going to create conflict.
2. Am I answering out of a desire to gain someone else's approval?
If I am trying to win someone's approval with my answer, then I'm not actually being nice. I'm being manipulative. I'm trying to manipulate them into changing how they feel about me by the actions I take. This is not only unlikely to work, but it leaves me on a permanent audition for a role in their life which I may never get. It's ultimately self-defeating.
3. Am I answering out of concerns about money?
If I am worrying about money when I'm giving my answer, I'm not focusing on the right things and I'm not going to answer the right way. I need to look at how I would answer if money weren't an object, because that's where I can quickly see whether or not this is in alignment with where I need to be.
4. Am I answering out of a genuine desire to demonstrate love for another person?
When the answer I'm giving is based on my genuine love and care for the person, it may not be comfortable and it may not be easy to do, but it will always be worth doing. They may not appreciate what I am doing, and they may not reciprocate in kind, but I am ultimately not doing it for them - I am doing it because it makes me a better person to do it.
5. Does the thought of how I answer bring me true peace?
One of the clearest signs that the answer I'm about to give is the right one is that it brings me a sense of genuine peace. I don't feel worry or regret, anxiety or indecision. I know I'm doing the right thing for the right reasons. I've never looked back with regret on decisions that brought me true peace, but I've looked back with regret on plenty of other decisions.
Say No Out of Love
Rejection hurts. Boundaries don't have to. If you're delivering no out of a place of love and not out of resentment or anger, let the other person know that you aren't saying no because you don't care but because saying yes right now would mean you couldn't give your full attention to their request. You are not rejecting them, you are simply protecting the both of you from a situation that could damage the relationship.
Say No When You Know You Can't Commit Yourself Fully
Every yes is a commitment of time, energy, and resources to a cause. If you can't give 100% of what is being asked, commit to only that portion of it that you know you can do. Protect your integrity by committing only when you are confident that you can deliver.
Say No To What Isn't Healthy for You
There are some things we say yes to that are never going to be good for us, and we know it. We can free up a lot of our time by deciding to say no to what isn't healthy for us so we can say yes to what is good for us. That Friday night bender isn't good for us, and eats up a surprising amount of time both in preparation for it and in recovery after it. Saying no to it will free up a lot of time for us to work on things that will bring lasting happiness.
Trust Your Instincts
Follow the love, not the money. Some things that you are asked to do will offer high pay but will lead you in the wrong way. It will lead you away from love, from family, from time to volunteer, or time to serve others. This is an indication it's not the right path to follow.
If you think you should say no but you're feeling pressured to say yes, say no. The same thing is true about saying yes. Don't compromise your values in order to please someone else. That's a recipe for regret and poor decision-making.
What Are Your Experiences? What Rules Do You Follow?
Share them in the comments below and let's discuss.
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