What's important?

A surprising amount of life is lost to the unimportant, not because it matters, but because it is loud, urgent, or habitual. Busyness has become socially acceptable, even admired, yet it is often a disguise for avoidance. Being busy is not the same as being effective, fulfilled, or impactful.

What makes something important is not how urgent it feels, or a client deadline, but the degree to which it aligns with your values, creates meaningful progress, or deepens the quality of your life and relationships. Develop your own importance criteria. If something doesn’t move the needle forward, it can wait, or perhaps, be let go altogether.

Simplicity creates power. Shorter meetings, fewer emails, and intentional boundaries around your attention reclaim enormous amounts of energy. Email does not deserve your constant presence. Meetings do not need to fill an hour to feel legitimate.

Create space deliberately. If you reclaimed even four hours a week, what would you choose to do with them? Don’t just imagine it; schedule it. What you protect is what you value.

Questions:

What am I giving my time to that feels urgent but contributes little to the life I actually want to live?

If I could only focus on three things this month that truly mattered, what would they be, and what would I need to stop doing to make space for them?

What might become possible if I treated my attention as my most valuable resource and protected it accordingly?

 

Yvonne Johnston
Yvonne Johnston
Leadership & Self-Mastery Coach

Yvonne Johnston is a Master Coach, former CEO of Brand South Africa, and Harvard speaker with over 40 years of leadership experience. She works with senior executives and individuals ready to get clear and make change that sticks.

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