The Real Reason You Feel So Busy (and What To Do About It) | Dorie Clark | TED

171,398 views ・ 2022-06-08

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Transcriber: Leslie Gauthier
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We live in a time-pressed culture.
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There is never enough time.
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And we see it,
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we feel it around us every day.
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We live in a world that valorizes work,
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accomplishment,
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busyness.
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And there’s real upside to that;
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there’s real value.
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We’re pushed,
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we’re driven toward achievement and action and creation.
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And that’s great,
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but there’s also a downside.
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And that's something that I think is worth talking about.
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There was a study done a while back,
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by the Management Research Group,
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of 10,000 senior leaders.
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And they asked them,
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“What is key to your organization’s success?”
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And 97 percent said long-term strategic thinking.
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I mean, when was the last time that 97 percent of people agreed on anything?
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There is near unanimity that being a long-term thinker --
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having perspective,
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having the ability to think and ask big questions --
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is essential to our success.
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And yet in a separate study,
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96 percent of leaders were surveyed,
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and they said they don’t have time for strategic thinking.
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(Laughter)
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What is going on?
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Why is it --
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how can it be
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that 96 percent of people are not doing the one thing
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that they say is most critical to their success?
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Well, I think we know the answer ...
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or at least we think we do.
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The average professional attends 62 meetings per month.
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That sounds pretty outrageous.
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How could that be?
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But if you actually break it down,
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it’s not that many.
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It’s two to three meetings per day,
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which is probably average for many of you.
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So 62 meetings a month.
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That does not help,
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and that is not wrong.
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It is a contributor.
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Also, we know --
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we know what else ...
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email.
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A study a while back by McKinsey
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showed that the average professional spends 28 percent of their time
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just responding to email.
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Of course that drains us,
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of course that makes us busy.
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But the truth is, it’s also, I believe, not the full picture.
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Those are manifestations.
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Those are problems, legitimately.
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But there are also some other things going on underneath the surface,
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reasons that perhaps we are,
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in some ways,
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working at cross-purposes.
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Because for so long
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almost all of us have said we want desperately to be less busy,
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and yet we keep making choices that put ourselves in the position
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where we’re just as busy as we’ve always been.
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What is going on?
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Well, some research out of Columbia University
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sheds a little bit of light on this.
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Silvia Bellezza and her colleagues have done interesting research
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into the fact that in some cultures --
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American culture chief among them --
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busyness is actually a form of status.
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When we say, “Oh, I am so crazy busy,”
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what we’re really saying
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is a societally-accepted version of “I am so important --
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(Laughter)
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“I am so popular!
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I am so in demand!”
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And the truth is that feeling can be hard to give up ...
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even if we say that we want to.
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That’s not the only reason, of course.
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It turns out it is very hard
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for the human mind to deal with conditions of uncertainty.
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And in modern life, there’s a lot of it.
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Sometimes we are given tasks or challenges,
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and the truth is, tactically, we just don’t know how to do it.
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“Increase sales by 30 percent.”
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Well, how?
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There’s a lot of ways you could do it.
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You’re not sure how.
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Sometimes it’s easier, frankly, to just double down
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and keep doing more of what you’re already doing.
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That might not be the best answer,
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but it’s an answer,
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and it removes uncertainty.
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The picture gets even worse
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when we’re talking about existential questions;
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when we’re talking about uncomfortable matters
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that we might not actually really want to deal with.
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That might be, “Am I in the right job?”
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It might be, “Am I in the right career?”
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Those are often questions,
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truth be told,
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we might not want the answer to.
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And so we become busy
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as a way so that we don’t even have to ask the question.
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Now, there's a third reason,
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and I’ll admit it’s one that I know well, personally,
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and that is that sometimes we use busyness as a way to numb ourselves out.
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I’ve experienced that.
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This is my boy Gideon,
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and he died in 2013.
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I’d had him for 17 years,
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and he was my best friend.
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And after he died,
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I’ll be honest,
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I didn’t want to be home
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because I knew that he wouldn’t be there.
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And so for two years,
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my life basically was an Uber to an airport,
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to a hotel
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and back again,
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because I just really didn’t want to face that.
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For a lot of us, there are things we sometimes don’t want to face.
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What we’re really looking for with work is an anesthetic.
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And as I like to say,
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work is better than crack --
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(Laughter)
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so if you’re choosing ...
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(Laughter)
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it’s not the worst.
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(Laughter)
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But the truth is, it's also not a sustainable solution.
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For many of us, we get trapped in the pattern of busyness,
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of overwork.
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It's hard sometimes even to remember what it was like before.
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Oftentimes in our mind’s eye,
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when we think of busyness,
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what we think of is this.
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What we think of is triumphant success
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and the world at your fingertips.
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The truth is, more often, busyness looks like this.
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It looks like loneliness.
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It looks like frustration.
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It looks like having a life
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that’s not really in your full control.
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So I would like to propose that we make a change.
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Because if we are ever going to succeed
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in beating back busyness once and for all,
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first of all, we have to get real
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and acknowledge what is actually behind some of the busyness
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that is filling our days.
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We have to really get honest about what it is that’s motivating us
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so that we can make a different choice.
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Because it is about our choice.
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We need to recognize that real freedom is about creating the space
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so that we can breathe,
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the space so that we can think.
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Ultimately, real freedom is about choosing how
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and with whom we want to be spending our time.
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Thank you.
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(Cheers)
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(Applause)
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