The Day I Just Couldn’t Handle One More Thing
I’m going to level with you guys. Yesterday was a total disaster from the minute I woke up. You know those days where every single little task feels like you’re dragging a dead elephant across concrete? Yeah, that was me. The reason I even pulled the deck for a simple one-card reading wasn’t some spiritual need, it was pure, stressed-out desperation.
I had piled everything up on myself. I’d told my main client I could do the big, impossible deadline. I’d promised a mate I’d look at his busted code for twenty minutes—which turned into two hours. Then, completely unrelated, my car decided to throw a fit, demanding I spend the afternoon on the phone with the garage. It was just one long line of demands, and I kept saying “yes” to all of it, like a complete idiot who can’t draw a boundary. I was physically and mentally overloaded. The air around me felt thick and dusty with unfinished business. I felt like I was carrying a stack of wet logs and someone kept throwing rocks on top.
I literally slammed my laptop shut just after lunch. I went downstairs, the lights were too bright, the noise was too loud, and when I went to make my third coffee of the day, the machine decided to finally kick the bucket. That was the absolute, pathetic tipping point. The coffee machine breaking was the straw that finally crushed me.
The Messy Process of Getting the Answer
I knew I couldn’t keep pushing. I’m usually the guy who believes in powering through, but yesterday, “powering through” felt like crashing a semi-truck into a wall. So, I grabbed the deck, the one I keep in a drawer under my desk, which is usually only for those big-picture weekend readings. No fancy ritual, no lighting incense, nothing. I needed a field-level, immediate action plan.

I didn’t even use a spread. Forget the Celtic Cross or the Horseshoe. I just decided I needed the answer to one single, blunt question: “What should I drop or change right now so I don’t quit everything and go live in a cave?”
I shuffled. Not well, just a clumsy, stressed-out mess of a shuffle. I felt the weight of the cards. I cut the deck right down the middle, slid the bottom half to the top, and just pulled the card that was now on the very top face-down. I stared at the back of it for maybe thirty seconds, holding my breath. This felt ridiculously overdramatic for a simple card pull, but hey, that’s where I was.
I flipped it. And there it was, glaring at me.
The Ten of Clubs (Wands).
Decoding the Clubs and Implementing the Drop
You don’t need to be a genius to get the message of the Ten of Clubs. It is not subtle. It’s the visual definition of “You’ve got too much crap to carry.” It’s a guy bent double, hauling ten huge sticks, barely able to see where he’s going. It’s the card of burden, completion near exhaustion, and often, needing to just drop the load for a minute.
My first thought was, “Well, thanks, deck. I know I’m carrying too much.” But the real message, the one that hit me, wasn’t about stopping everything; it was about systematic de-piling. The action needed today wasn’t quitting, it was sorting the stack and realizing some sticks could just be left behind.
So, here is the exact, blunt action plan I implemented, based on that one card:
- I immediately listed everything. I mean everything. The massive client deadline, the busted code promise, the car problem, paying the electric bill, the broken coffee machine, and picking up the dry cleaning.
- I examined the list for what wasn’t mine or urgent. The friend’s code? Not urgent. I had just offered it, not promised it to save his life. I texted him right then and there: “Dude, swamped, can’t look till next week. Good luck.” One stick dropped.
- I looked for the quick win, the easiest stick to dispatch first. The coffee machine. That broken thing was causing me psychological damage. I watched a quick video, grabbed the necessary wrench, and fixed the simple jam in twenty minutes. It wasn’t the biggest stick, but having caffeine back in my life felt like cutting the load in half immediately.
- I delegated the essential but non-critical stick. The dry cleaning/electric bill was just errands. I called my partner and begged him to handle that after work. Another stick dropped.
- I rescheduled the biggest stick. That massive client deadline? I sent a polite email explaining I’d hit an unforeseen snag (the car, the code mess), and that I needed a 48-hour extension. Surprisingly, they were fine with it. I gave myself breathing room.
The Ten of Clubs didn’t tell me to quit my job. It just told me to put the damn stack down, sort through what could be thrown into the fire pit, and then pick up the necessary few pieces again. By the time 4 PM rolled around, I had gotten more done on the actual important client work than I had in the six miserable hours before the pull. It was proof that sometimes, the most effective action you can take when overwhelmed is to stop, drop, and rearrange the pile.
Next time you’re feeling like a total mess, don’t keep pushing. Just ask the question and be prepared to take an immediate, physical action to lighten the load. It works.
