Learning to Say No to Good Things

ā€œDuring the first eighteen years of our lives, if we grew up in fairly average, reasonably positive homes, we were told ā€˜Noā€™ or what we could not do, or what would not work, more than 148,000 times,ā€ Dr. Shad Helmstetter states in his book, What to Say When You Talk to Yourself. Ā 

If this is true, I figure saying no is not that hard for most people. However, I have said my fair share of noā€™s to myself, friends and family, but I realize that in certain cases, itā€™s quite challenging to say it. I donā€™t mean that Iā€™m a pushover or susceptible to peer pressure, even though I will admit that sometimes I struggle with desiring to please everyone; what I mean is I have trouble turning down opportunities, even when it is very necessary to turn them down.Ā 

Rapper Lil Jon and a caption that reads "turn down for what?"

from QuickMeme

Iā€™ve had a terrible habit of biting off more than I can chew, grabbing at nearly every positive opportunity that has come my way. My reasoning is this: my school and home life combined are very stressful, and I get tired of having to do what I donā€™t really want to do. In order to counteract the negative, I go to the other extreme and jam-pack my schedule with positive. I engage in events that I know will benefit me, even if the benefit is simply a good mood.

The problem is that this behavior has often compromised my other responsibilities. A lot of times Iā€™ve had lunch with good friends when I could have been doing homework, or Iā€™ve gone to a social gathering on a night that could have been spent relaxing and reflecting alone at home. After all, who wants to do homework? And who wants to be alone?

Itā€™s very hard to say no to good things, because, letā€™s face it: theyā€™re good things! Sadly, there is such a thing as too much good. My friend Cassandra loves to use this analogy: cancer in the simplest sense is an abnormal reproduction of cells. Cellular reproduction is necessary for our survival, but when there are too many cells, it can be harmful.

While I have been aware of all of this for quite some time, last week was the breaking point that forced me to stop thinking it and start doing it. Having a super busy schedule that did not account for legitimate, intentional rest (aside from sleep) meant that the little time I had leftover was spent with Angel, and my ā€œleftoversā€ are not pretty at all; I was burned out, could barely muster up a smile, and at any given moment I was ready to either break something, scream, or burst into tears (the most common, less violent option) from sheer exhaustion and overwhelming stress. I realized that I could not keep treating him, or myself, like this.

Practicing saying no will not be easy, but I know it will pay off in the long run, and that I must start now if I want my situation to change as soon as possible. I believe setting boundaries is the only way you can enjoy and protect true freedom. It will require the guts to temporarily disappoint friends, family, Angel, and myself; but delayed gratification is more worthwhile and long-lasting than instant gratification. My future self will thank me.