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Janet Pelly's avatar

All my significant transitions have happened during or after burnout. In other words, I pushed through until my body and mind couldn’t take it any more.

A wonderful therapist introduced me to the Involvement Continuum which is great for anyone in a caring/helping field, paid or not.

https://sifr.foundationhouse.org.au/app/uploads/2020/06/Involvement-continuum.pdf

Working on finding a middle in the continuum involves balancing doing (tasks, deadlines, tending to crises), and being (reflecting, resting) to stay productive and maintain well-being.

For me, the ‘high’ associated with doing (identity, contribution, belonging, ‘wins’) means I have to consciously catch myself and make time for being. Daily journaling is the hardest and most effective habit for that.

Thanks for a wonderful, thought provoking article

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Natalie Claire's avatar

Exploring the dichotomy of my Doing and Being (and everything in between) has been one of my greatest joys, curiosities and challenges since experiencing my own disorientating dilemmas and leaving my corporate career to start my coaching practice years ago. Thank you for making the link to the developmental line, I’m really interested in how this manifests through the ‘stages’...

One of the reasons why I love Non-Linear Movement practice, is its all ‘being’, there’s no where to go, nothing to achieve. I find that even in my yoga practice I can get caught in ‘doing’ and achieving. My now 7 month puppy has also really brought me to states of ‘being’ and presence, both joyful and exasperation!

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