Submitted by ElegantCherries t3_111d8uq in GetMotivated
Something I've been struggling with in the last year is how to motivate myself without the anxiety/urgency created by negative consequences or external deadlines. If there are none, I just do nothing. I go all lethargic and shut down and can't get myself to do anything at all.
e.g. boss asks me for something by 4pm that day. I am ON IT, super focused, doing a good job and delivering on time.
Boss gives me my own project with unclear deliverables and a long timeline... I half-arse it and don't start until two weeks before the deadline. I have always gotten away with this because I do produce good work... I just do it in a mad rush at the end.
I'm all or nothing. I know it comes from childhood trauma, and it's so ingrained in my brain that no external demand means now I rest, and conserve my energy until there is another threat/demand to react to.
I've had a lot of therapy, and my most recent bout did a really good job at calming the hyperresponsiveness of my threat and drive systems so they're not constantly causing me too much anxiety - the idea is this gives me room to choose what I want, rather than reacting to what I think I should want, or what others want.
But I'm now left in a situation where if there's no threat, there is zero motivation, and I just shut down. How can I move from being reactive to proactive? I cannot keep promises to myself at all. I can keep a new habit for about a month, then I go back to not doing it, even if the goal is important to me.
Even more frustratingly, I do meet almost every goal I set. I do get my work done, I have studied successfully, I have lost a lot of weight, I've lived overseas, I've saved a lot of money, I went to therapy consistently for five years, I completed Couch to 5k. It's like... I do get things done, but I don't like how I do it, and day to day it makes me feel like shit.
If anyone can relate, please let me know! And any tips you have for gently starting to overcome this are most welcome.
tele68 t1_j8e0ox5 wrote
Same. It's been a lifelong mystery that I mostly dealt with by not fighting it too hard.
But what you sacrifice is things like writing a book or other solo creative situation.