by By Bill Dueease
We all face decisions that involve competing priorities. We all have three different lives or worlds that
compete for our attention, energy and activity. These are our personal lives, our work-related lives, and
our family lives. Our personal lives consist of our health, our inner private likes and dislikes, our inner
beliefs, and our spiritual feelings. Our work-related lives consist of what we do to earn an income to
provide resources to live and prosper. Our family lives consist of our relatives and friends and our
relationships with each member.
As you can imagine, each of these worlds will attract our interests and can create various demands on
our time, resources, and energy. When these worlds create demands that compete with the other, such
that we must continuously choose one world at the expense of the other, we get out of balance.
How do you know when you have achieved life balance?
People achieve balance in their lives when they can consciously and subconsciously align their
thoughts and activities with who they are and what they want to do, without conflict or guilt.
People who are in balance, experience "being in the zone" of life. Life is good! In this article, we
explore the steps to attaining life balance.
Step 1: Discover who you really are.
You will want to first discover who you really are, what you stand for, and what your beliefs and
values are. There are two levels to research. The easiest and the most accessible is your conscious
or rational you, where you logically dissect then evaluate things. But the real you is where your true
inner values, beliefs, and spirituality are within your subconscious or intuition level. People learn
to rationalize almost anything, but they cannot hide or escape from their inner core values.
Conflicts and personal stress occur when the rational self accepts and conducts actions that are
contrary to suppressed inner values. Take the time and energy to discover your inner values
and beliefs, and allow your intuition to take center stage in your thoughts and action processes.
When you follow your instincts in an environment that embraces you, you enter the “zone.”
Step 2: Discover what you really want to do
We have all been told from birth what to do and what not to do. We follow many rules because
it doing so best for living harmoniously with others and ourselves. But, along the way we are
also told by parents, teachers, advisors, and bosses what we "should" and "should not" do to
suit their personal agendas and perspectives. These are the "shoulds" that we carry
with us and that we try to follow with very confusing and mixed results.
Most people have inner passions that really excite and motivate them. These passions develop
early in life and change with time. Yet we suppress them. These passions are almost always good in
nature and very positive. The executive may have a passion to create a rose garden. The
homemaker may have a passion to play the drums. But they don't, because they do not recognize
and accept them, and if they did, their conscious mind will rationalize that they "shouldn't"
after responding to all of the previously implanted "shoulds" by others. Yet, both the executive
and the homemaker feel something is missing and can't put a finger on it.
Everybody also has desires that are extremely important. These desires begin with the basics of life
such as staying healthy, being secure, attaining food and shelter, being socially accepted, and
having a loving inner circle to support us. These basic desires are rather easy to determine.
Once you recognize that they exist, you will see that they are almost required for a normal
existence. Once these desires are accomplished, you will develop other desires, such as living
in a warm climate, working outdoors, raising a happy and healthy family, and being acknowledged
for being special. These are more personal in nature and are also less obvious. This is where the
“shoulds" begin to enter the picture, and you find yourself following the desires you allow
others to impose on you. For example, you might go to law school to become a lawyer because
your parents strongly felt you “should” become a lawyer. Or you might become a full-time mom
and raise a family early on in life because that is what everyone did where you grew up.
Step 3: Recognize and manage your conflicts
Life is a bowl of conflicts and stress occurs when competing forces interfere with your ability to
decide what to do. Additional stress occurs when you feel bad when you do some things, and
you felt that you "should" have done something else. Then you do not enjoy or even fully complete
what you decide to do, because you continue to think you "should" be doing something else.
The executive will certainly have conflicts between leading her company and creating the rose
garden. The homemaker will experience numerous conflicts between being a mother, a wife, and
an individual person when she thinks about learning to play the drums and even more when she
thinks about playing the drums with a band.
Once you can be honest with yourself and discover what your true passions and desires are, you
will be in the position to determine what priorities you place on each. It will be much easier and
clearer to evaluate and establish these priorities because you will know what the choices are and
more importantly you will be the only person involved in making the decision. You will be free
from having to consider the conflicting forces of the "shoulds" that are based upon what others
want you to do. This freedom will be a great relief because you will not have to live through the
agendas or desires of others, which can be a very tricky thing, even if you tried. Now it is only
you deciding, and the choices become much easier.
The executive can decide that continuing in her position is a high priority, but that carving
out four hours a week to work on the rose garden will provide her the relaxation and personal
enjoyment she wants and needs to function better as an executive. She will be motivated to
focus more on her executive duties as she is doing them, knowing that doing so will lead her
to being able to exercise her passion of raising her own roses. Now she will enjoy doing both
and will be better at participating in both functions with minimal conflict.
Step 4: Eliminate guilt imposed on you by others
People allow guilt to enter their world when they dwell on the fact that they are to blame for
things they did or did not do. People take on the burden of being wrong and responsible for
not meeting the expectations of others. Sometimes people feel guilty because some religions
appear to impose guilt when followers are not perfect. Yet the fact is that everyone is fallible
and will never be perfect. When you set expectations or allow others to impose expectations
that you must be perfect and you inevitability fail to meet the purity of perfection, you feel
guilty. Then you try harder to be perfect and feel even guiltier because you don't reach perfection
again. The cycle continues.
Most people have an innate philosophy of life or spirituality that they need and want to follow.
The key is to discover your spirituality and follow it. When you follow your own spirituality, you
greatly reduce or eliminate the artificial guilt you feel because you let others impose their philosophy on you.
Step 5: Eliminate guilt you impose upon yourself
Another key to removing guilt is to recognize that you cannot always make the best decisions
all of the time. One great philosopher, Claude Lunsford, said that you want to make decisions
based upon your true inner beliefs and purposes and the information you gather at the time.
You evaluate the options available and make the best decision, based upon the truth. Then you
want to accept the decisions as being the best you could have made at the time.
You do not want to impose guilt upon yourself for a less than perfect outcome. You might
not have been able to know about other factors that would have affected your decision, or
things might have changed that you could not have foreseen that changed the results of your
decision. You do not want to look back and second guess yourself, but you want to accept
your past decisions and learn from the new knowledge you gained to adjust your decision
process for the most important issue at hand, which is to make better decisions in the future.
Step. 6: Follow the path YOU choose to achieve your chosen future goals.
Develop life goals for yourself and start the process to achieve them. Now that you know all
about yourself, and how to make decisions without guilt, you are poised to use this information to
visualize your desired life and develop a number of life goals that will take you to where you want
to go. People reach life balance when they know where they want to go, set the goals to get there,
and begin the steps to achieve their goals.
Life is a journey, and you now have everything you need to create the most desirable, most
enjoyable and most fulfilling journey for yourself. Once you set your goals, you want take steps
each day to reach your life goals, and you will not only be amazed at how well you will achieve
them, but at how enjoyable and stress-free the journey will be.
Your desires, priorities, passions, and even sometimes your beliefs will change. That is very normal.
Once you discover what your new ones are, you will want to create new goals accordingly, using
the same process and continue your life journey in the new directions that you choose for yourself.
Enjoy the trip!
Questions about some of the terminology used in this article? Get more information (definitions and links) on key college, career, and job-search
terms by going to our Job-Seeker's Glossary of Job-Hunting Terms.
Bill Dueease is a business coach who is the president The Coach Connection (TCC), which he
co-founded in May 2001, to assist people to achieve their greatest results from life and career
coaching. More than 96.5 percent of TCC's clients have achieved their initial life and career
goals because they were assured that the four key conditions to successful coaching were
met before engaging their coach. Fortune Magazine, Female Entrepreneur, The Brazen Careerist,
and The AMEX Platinum Card Newsletter have described TCC to its readers. Bill had previously
founded other very successful companies, including a Texas petroleum company in 1980, a
New Zealand ski area in 1982, and a nationwide U.S. office products distribution company in 1992.
Bill was featured in a 30-minute 1988 documentary film produced by the Public Broadcasting
Service (PBS) and the New Zealand Government describing how a simple sheep-grazing mountain
was so successfully converted into the Cardrona NZ ski area. Bill's educational articles on career
and business coaching solutions have been published more than 97 times throughout the US and
Canada, by 71+ magazines and periodicals. Bill can be reached by contacting The Coach
Connection at 800-887-7214 or 239-415-1777 or coaches@findyourcoach.com, or
The Coach Connection (TCC). You
may receive a free copy of the article "The Ten Paths to Human Improvement" by contacting him.