I love my routines. They’ve saved my s$$ over the past 12 years. They helped me retrain my body and brain to be a heck of a lot more functional than they were in 2006. And when it comes to TBI recover, routine and repetition are my friends.
Seriously, they’re like the secret weapon against the disruptions of TBI. Just figuring out how to do things exactly the same way, over and over, till that way become ingrained and you don’t have to think about it anymore… it’s magic. And it does so much to rebuild and solidify the new connections that replace the ones that got frayed and pulled to pieces in the brain injury itself.
Every now and then, it’s good to change things up, though.
That’s where I am, now. I’ve done a lot of hard thinking, over the past weeks and months, and I realize I need to have a different focus in my daily life. I need to spend a lot less time focusing on my career and professional prospects, and spend a lot more time focusing on my health and quality of life.
I’m not gonna lie — I really had to double down on my work situations, over the past years. I was in a downward spiral of sorts, in one overly challenging job after another, working in very hostile conditions that eroded my physical and mental health. And the past 3-1/2 years have also been a real challenge, in some ways. The thing that’s made it the most challenging is that I got caught up in ideas about advancing, getting promoted, moving up in the world. And that sucked me into a vortex of caring about what other people thought of me, what other people said about me, what other people did to me at work.
And that wasn’t a good use of time. Because here I am, years later, no further along on my professional path (even set back, compared to where I was before), and just looking back at a whole lot of frustration and dead-ends.
Don’t get me wrong. I’m highly ambitious. I’m driven. That’s for sure. But at some point, being ambitious according to someone else’s rules is just a bad idea for me. I need to be ambitious according to my own rules. I need to drive towards things that matter to me — having decent relationships with people, doing my best work, learning and growing as I go — rather than getting caught up in other people’s power games.
Somehow, those games never work out in my favor. I just get played.
So, I’m pretty much over that. Time to focus on other priorities. Time to funnel my energy into things that are going to build me up, not tear me down, and pay off in the short- and long-term, when it comes to just doing a decent job.
Heck, I’m not even sure I want to get promoted, anyway, considering the kinds of people who are climbing to the top, these days. It seems like a much better use of my time to focus on my mental and physical health… learning interesting things and applying them to my life… sharing what I know…. and just having the best life possible. So long as I make enough money to support myself and I have the time and opportunity to do something truly useful with my life, that’s what matters.
And that’s where my head is at today.
Ha… we’ll see how I’m feeling tomorrow… or next week… 😉
Reblogged this on Traumatic Brain Injury There is Support.
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Thank you for your post. My husband is a 25-year “survivor” of a TBI. Unfortunately, it permanently “benched” him at the height of his career, etc. And…what you say is true about the process you must undergo regarding learning to do things and such. But also, I connect with what you say about being promoted, moving up in an organization. The politics and games involved are sometimes not worth. I prefer happiness and contentment to the power. My husband was a bigwig in a large healthcare organization and was able to do it until his accident and now seeing how things have evolved in this realm over the past 25 years, he’s happy not to be in it. Thanks for posting…good reminders for me.
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You’re very welcome. Thank you for writing. Yes, it’s funny about that whole “climbing the ladder” business. When you’re in it, it can be THE most important thing in the world. But when you’re not — and you CAN’T be part of it — you can see it for what it is. And be grateful for all that life offers, outside of that world.
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