You know, life just throws curveballs, right? Sometimes you feel like you’re sailing along smooth, and then out of nowhere, a storm hits. I remember this one time, it wasn’t even a big, dramatic thing, but it felt like everything was just… hazy. Like I couldn’t see the path forward, and every decision felt heavy. It was a few years back, and I was staring down a mountain of stuff. Not just one problem, but a whole bunch of little ones that piled up, threatening to tip the whole cart over.
I had just wrapped up a pretty demanding big project at my old gig. You know the kind where you put in long hours, practically live at the office, and then when it’s done, you feel this massive slump? Yeah, that. And right after that, my old man, bless his heart, decided it was the perfect time to start talking about his retirement and how he wanted me to “look into” taking over some bits of his small business. Now, I love my dad, but his idea of “looking into” something usually meant “figure out the whole damn thing from scratch because I’m tired.”
So, here I was, drained from one thing, and immediately faced with another, even bigger, unknown. My energy tank was at zero, and my brain felt like scrambled eggs. I tried to just push through, you know? My usual go-to move. Just grit my teeth and power through. But this time, it just wasn’t working. I’d sit there, staring at spreadsheets my dad gave me, which looked like they were from a different century, and my mind would just drift. I couldn’t focus. I felt this real sense of being lost at sea, without a map or even a compass.
One evening, I was just completely fed up. I slammed my laptop shut, went to the kitchen, and just stood there, staring at the fridge. My wife walked in, saw the look on my face, and just said, “Alright, what’s got your knickers in a twist now?” I just mumbled, “Everything. Nothing. I don’t even know where to start.” And that’s when it clicked for me. That phrase. “Where to start.” That was the real problem. It wasn’t that the challenges were impossible; it was that they were shapeless, overwhelming blobs.

I decided right then that my usual “head-down, run-straight-at-it” approach was bunk for this kind of situation. I needed to shift gears. Instead of seeing it as one giant, impossible task, I started thinking about it like… well, like untangling a really knotted fishing line. You can’t just yank it all at once; you gotta find one loose end and slowly, patiently, work your way through.
Here’s what I actually did, step-by-step, to claw my way out of that feeling:
- First, I stopped. Seriously, I just stopped trying to do anything for a full day. I took a walk, watched a dumb movie, anything to clear my head. Gave my brain a total reset.
- Then, I grabbed a big whiteboard. Not a fancy app, just a plain old whiteboard and some markers. This was crucial. I needed to see everything laid out, physically, in front of me.
- I dumped every single thought and worry onto that board. No filter. From “learn dad’s accounting software” to “remember to call Aunt Carol,” it all went up there. This was about externalizing the chaos in my head.
- Next, I started grouping things. I drew circles around related items. All the business stuff went in one corner, personal errands in another, my own career thoughts in a third. It immediately started to look less like a mess and more like a few distinct piles.
- Then came the brutal honest talk with myself about priorities. What absolutely had to be done this week? What could wait? What was just noise? I used different colored markers for “urgent,” “important,” and “can wait.”
- For each “urgent” or “important” item, I broke it down even further. This was the untangling part. “Learn dad’s accounting software” became: “1. Find out what software it is. 2. Ask dad for login. 3. Watch a YouTube tutorial. 4. Try entering one sample transaction.” Suddenly, it wasn’t one giant beast, but four little, manageable tasks.
- I scheduled those tiny tasks. Not just “do it,” but “Monday 9 AM: Watch X tutorial video.” I blocked out specific times in my calendar. This made it real, and it gave me a sense of control.
- And here’s the kicker: I gave myself permission to only focus on one small task at a time. No jumping around. If I was watching that accounting video, that’s all I was doing. My phone was away, no emails open. Pure, focused attention for just that one small chunk of work.
Slowly but surely, that huge, overwhelming blob started to shrink. Each time I completed one of those tiny, broken-down tasks, I actually felt a small surge of accomplishment. It wasn’t about the big win; it was about stringing together a bunch of small wins. And because I had taken the time to lay everything out, categorize it, and break it down, each step felt… well, not easy exactly, but certainly not as hard as it had seemed when it was just a jumbled mess in my head. I wasn’t fighting the current anymore; I was navigating it, one paddle stroke at a time. Eventually, I got through it all, and my dad’s business is running smoothly with my inputs, and I even picked up some new skills along the way that I never thought I’d learn.
