When Everything Feels Important - The Hidden Cost of Carrying Too Much
One of the first signs that capacity is stretched isn't exhaustion.
It's compression.
Everything starts feeling equally important.
Every email.
Every request.
Every conversation.
Every decision.
There is no hierarchy.
Just urgency.
Earlier in The Human Shift,
The Cost of Constant Readiness, we explored how constant readiness changes perception. When the nervous system stays activated for too long, discernment becomes harder to access.
The result is that everything begins competing for the same attention.
A Reframe
When everything feels urgent, the problem is often not workload.
It's a lack of space.
One Simple Practice
At the beginning of your day, identify one thing that truly matters.
Not three.
Not five.
One.
Let that become your anchor.
What This Looks Like In Practice
A leader begins every morning reviewing a long list of tasks.
By lunchtime, she feels behind.
When she shifts her focus to identifying the most important outcome for the day, her decision-making improves and her stress decreases.
The work doesn't disappear.
The relationship to the work changes.
Question to Consider
What would happen if not everything deserved equal access to your attention?
In the shift,
Dr. Nika White
P.S. What is taking up attention right now that may not actually deserve it?
Read more from The Human Shift on Substack, where I share long-form essays on leadership, culture, and how we work and live.
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