Try softer 1

Try softer

After the year we’ve had, no make that the last two years we’ve had, this is not the time to try harder to do better. This is the time to try softer.

I’ve been intrigued by a phrase a friend of mine has been using, “try softer”, based on a book she is reading by the same title, written by Aundi Kolber . I personally haven’t read it yet, but from everything I have heard, it’s definitely on my list. I’ve picked my friend’s brain a little to mine what she’s discovered from reading this book.

After the year we’ve had, no make that the last two years we’ve had, this is not the time to try harder to do better. This is the time to try softer. We are living in times of pandemic fatigue, and we need to think about ways to conserve and gather our energy for the days ahead as we are certainly nowhere near out of the woods just yet.

How often have you told yourself (or been told) to try harder to do better? And if you do better, life will be better. And if you try really hard enough, you will get there. And if you don’t get there, you obviously weren’t trying hard enough. Did you ever get caught in this thought cycle? Or maybe it’s embedded in the values you grew up with, always pushing yourself to try harder to do better or being pushed by your parents. Maybe it’s something you find yourself telling your kids now.

When we try harder, we’re generally working on externals and not focusing inward on our own responses and process. We ignore the signals our body is trying to send us, we don’t slow down because we absolutely have to try harder to do better to get there… Sound familiar?

Trying harder to do better sets us up for burn out and disconnection. Trying harder triggers the perfectionist or people pleaser in us, the need to “get things right” and to look good, in order to gain approval, recognition and validation and results. Needing recognition or approval is not wrong, it’s human. But these do come from outside of ourselves and being driven only by externals is ultimately not nurturing for our souls. We lose part of ourselves if we only ever make decisions based on what other people say and think, or only for results.

Photo by Ashley Whitlatch

A trying softer approach to life enables us to take a look at what needs to be done, and reflecting for ourselves on what is for me now, and what is for me at all – regardless of externals including other people’s approval. (This can be way harder to do than say!)

Trying softer means being mindful of when we are not entirely comfortable, when our body is giving us signals of overwhelm or overstimulation and taking time to take stock and be present to that. It means stopping to notice where we are being challenged, and not trying to fix it, but maybe asking ourselves a couple of questions; This is important, but is it for me now? Is it for me at all? Could this wait for another day or time, does it have to be done now?

I have a wise friend who is fantastic and intentional about what she chooses to take on in her life. She will often say “These are all good things, but I am going to focus on X for now.” Her reasoning is not selfish, often her decisions benefit her family as well as others. But she knows herself, she knows her capacities and limits and makes decisions on this basis. She stewards her own levels of energy well because she listens to her body and she notices when she has taken on too much, and when she needs to say no.  This is an example of a try softer approach.

In this coming Christmas and holiday season, given that there is a certain level of exhaustion for most of us, think about how you could try softer for your own sake and that of your family. So, instead of trying to create “the best Christmas ever” (to counteract the difficulties of the last year), think about what you really want and need. Have a family meeting and chat through what you would like to happen as a family. How you can all have the most fun and enjoyment through the festivities? How can you help one another so that the load is shared? What are you going to say yes to as a family? What are you going to say no to? What does your family really need at this time? You can list all the wishes and dreams of the family, it’s always fun to dream, but then choose what is realistic given energy levels, finances and time.

Where you have little ones who you still want to create a magical experience for, think through realistically what is enough for them? Remember, joy is often found in the most simple things. And definitely remember, your presence is most desired and joy-giving for them.

Thank you, please call again soon!

16 December 2024 Thank you I am so thankful to do what I do. I absolutely love my job, I love working with kids, I love working with parents. Yes, that is YOU! If I could sit and write a note of gratitude to each of you, I would. And my gratitude is about this;…

Read More

Endings

1 December 2024 It has been a week of lasts for our family as our youngest child finished primary school. I am struggling to process these words as I type them. We no longer have a kid in primary school. We will no longer be returning to Clifton Notties as parents. It’s crazy. Clifton Notties…

Read More

The ability to respond

23 November 2024 David Whyte, an Irish poet says that the word responsibility means “the ability to respond”. He says that we (adults) have made responsibility a heavy burden; all the things that we have to lug around and take care of, we think about work, home and financial responsibilities. We think about our responsibility…

Read More

Introducing a small project with mighty results.

15 November 2024 On any given weekday afternoon, you can arrive at Ethembeni’s Family Centre in Mpophomeni, the home of the Education Support programme (Ed Support) and find between 60 and 70 children ages 5 to 21 years engaged in meaningful academic activities. Facilitators are trusted, caring adults who lead small groups of about 15…

Read More

Good Enough

1 November It’s the first day of the second to last day of the year, how are you? Let’s all just take a deep breath. NICE! I admit to borrowing liberally from someone else’s post today, and it’s just too good not to share. Peter Gray is a Research Psychologist and neuroscientist at Boston College.…

Read More

Am I the problem?

25 October 2024 I don’t take lightly the fact that dozens of parents each year take the step to make an appointment with me and talk about the need for play therapy for their child. For some, this can be an incredibly vulnerable space. Perhaps because of the turmoil they’re going through. Perhaps because it’s…

Read More

Four Harms of a screen-based childhood: Learning from The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt

18 October 2024 As promised in my post a few weeks ago, I am unpacking some of my learning from reading The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt. In chapter 5 of the book he looks at 4 major harms caused by social media, online gaming and increased screen-based childhood in general. The four harms are social deprivation,…

Read More

Mental Health Awareness Month: Spotlight on Men

11 October 2024 It is Mental Health Awareness Month in October. The Masiviwe project has produced a video highlighting men’s mental health. One of the men interviewed states: “If you’re a man, you don’t cry. The question is; if you’re going through pain, where do you go? In your childhood you used to cry. Today,…

Read More

On Not Being Polite

4 October 2024   I have been telling my children recently when not to be polite. Don’t let people walk all over you – if sports is a metaphor for life… On the sports field, don’t be polite. You don’t say “please” when trying to get the ball away from your opponent. One hockey match, I…

Read More

Awe

27 September 2024 We spent part of the holiday in a cottage in a wood (literally) and got happily snowed in (literally), but only for 24 hours. For a family like ours, born and bred in mostly the sub-tropical parts of South Africa, the snow was a delightful, awe-inspiring experience. We saw the snow forecast…

Read More