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January
11, 2006
http://chetday.com
Energy
Sinks
by Chet Day
When I use the term "energy sinks," I'm referring to those moments
or relationships or incidents that occur all the time in life that consume your
energy like an elephant sinking into an Olympic-sized pool of quicksand.
I can write with some authority here because I've had a problem dealing with
energy sinks most of my life. I still have the problem, though I'm getting better
about energy sinks with time and constant conscious effort to improve.
Energy sinks occur most often in people who try to please everyone all the time.
Statistically, if, like me, you are the first child in a family, you have a
better chance of being pulled in and drawn down by energy sinks than your siblings
do.
Why?
Because the eldest child in a family usually tries to please everyone else in
the family more than the younger brothers and sisters. And this desire to please
carries over into adulthood.
If you're trying to please everyone all the time, you've put yourself in a no-win
situation. Because no matter how hard you try and how hard you work and how
good a person you try to be, you're just plain not going to please everyone
all the time.
If you persist in trying to please everyone all the time, you've opened yourself
to constant energy sinks.
An energy sink, then, represents a position where you are going to squander
some of the energy you have for the day on a situation that doesn't deserve
the energy you're giving it.
Example of one of my typical energy sinks:
I get an e-mail from a vegan guru criticizing the Health & Beyond Living
to the Max program, telling me people aren't intelligent enough to develop their
own health routines and that they have to be led by the hand. This person proclaims
my approach as being potentially harmful to other people. He gives no recognition
to my experience or to my years of study in the alternative health field or
to my desire to help people reclaim their health.
In no uncertain terms, he flat out informs me that folks must be led by a guru
like him -- that they aren't smart enough to understand health or nutrition
on their own. He knows this to be a fact, and he knows I am wrong in what I'm
teaching.
If I don't publicly retract what I'm saying immediately, he threatens to tell
everyone he knows that my writing is dangerous and that they shouldn't read
it.
Now, my friends, this little piece of confrontational and aggressive e-mail
represents a classic energy sink.
(And one of the keys to dealing with energy sinks is to recognize them when
they arrive and not after they've drained you and left you tense and half exhausted!)
A few years ago, I would have dropped everything I was doing and would have
spent hours trying to explain my point of view to someone who confronted me
as above.
You see, in those days, I not only still wanted to please everyone, but I also
still thought it was possible to please everyone if I just wrote hard enough
and made myself clear enough.
I hadn't yet learned that some individuals aren't as open-minded as others,
and that some people are so entrenched in their points of view that no matter
what you say to them you can't move them off the hard rock on which they stand.
Of course, the letter I spent hours writing might or might not be read with
any degree of attention, but you can be sure a response would be forthcoming
that would require more thought and more writing, and this might continue for
days.
A classic energy sink.
Was anything gained by a dialogue like this?
No, not really, since both parties had points of view they considered the correct
one.
Was anything lost by a dialogue like this?
Yes, hours and hours of time and energy that would have done more good had both
of us involved in the energy sink used that time and energy for something other
than to argue our particular point of view.
So these days, when I get an energy sink letter in my e-mail box, if it's nasty
and confrontational, I either ignore it altogether or politely thank the person
for sharing his or her thoughts.
I then move on about my business.
But do I reject what all energy sink letters say?
Not at all, and this is an important point for learning to deal with energy
sinks.
By not engaging in the energy sink, you save valuable time and nerve power;
but by ignoring what the person had to say, you may miss a possible opportunity
for growth.
So I always read and think carefully about what everyone says to me since one
of my goals in life is to improve as much as I can each day. At the same time,
I don't let aggressive and critical comments, situations, or relationships take
away too much of that day's storehouse of energy that I prefer to put into my
work.
In other words, I learn what I can from each situation, but I don't get bogged
down in conflict.
You can do that too if you make a conscious choice to recognize and then not
get engaged in energy sinks.
Chet
Day
Editor, The Health Circus
http://chetday.com
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