Here are 10 different types of demotivation and the strategies that will help you to get motivated again:
1.) You’re demotivated by fear
When you’re afraid, even if you’re entering territory that you’ve
chosen to move into, a part of yourself is determined to avoid going
forward. Fear slows you down and makes you hesitant and careful, which
can be beneficial to you, but sometimes your fears are based on your
imagination rather than an accurate assessment of the risks in your
reality. If your fear is big enough, even if you’re also excited to go
forward, the part of you that wants to keep you safe can successfully
prevent you from going forward into territory that’s both desirable and
safe.
How to get motivated again: To get motivated, you
need to deal with your fear. Start by naming your fears so that they’re
out in the open. Remember to say a gentle thank you to your fears –
they’re trying to protect you after all. Then question your fears; “Why
am I afraid of that happening?” “What are the chances that would really
happen?” Some of your fears will slip away now.
Look at the fears that are left. What are these fears telling you
about the research you need to do, the gaps you need to fill and the
risk management strategies you need to put in place? Honor that wisdom
by building it into your plan. Finally, consider breaking the changes
you’re wanting to make down into smaller steps and focus on just the
next few small steps – this will calm your fears.
2.) You’re demotivated by setting the wrong goals
Martha Beck
has a great model for understanding motivation. She explains that we
have an Essential Self and a Social Self. Your Essential Self is the
part of you that’s spontaneous and creative and playful, the part that
knows what’s most important to you. Your Social Self is the part of you
that developed since the day you were born, learning the rules of the
tribe and working hard to make sure that you’re safe by making you
follow the rules of the tribe.
We’re all surrounded with so many messages that feed into our Social
Selves and we’re keen to impress our tribe. When you feel demotivated,
it’s because you’re setting goals based purely on what your Social Self
wants and this is pulling you away from the direction your Essential
Self is wanting you to take. Your Essential Self uses demotivation to
slow you down and try to disinterest you from the toxic goals you’ve
set.
How to get motivated again: Take some time to
review your goals. Because your Essential Self is non-verbal, you can
easily access your Essential Self through your body. Notice how your
body responds as you think of each of the goals you’re trying to work
on. When your body (and particularly your breathing) show signs of
tightness and constriction, that’s a pretty good indication that you’re
trying to follow toxic goals. If you get a constricted reaction, scrap
your current goals and question all your stories about what you
“should” do with your life. Notice what makes you smile spontaneously
or lose track of time and set goals around that stuff instead.
3.) You’re demotivated by lack of clarity about what you want
When you haven’t consciously and clearly articulated what you want,
your picture of your future will be vague. We like what’s familiar and
so we resist what’s unfamiliar and vague and we stay with and re-create
what’s familiar to us instead. If you’re not clear about what you want
to create, then it makes sense that you’ll lack motivation to act
because you’d rather stay with your current familiar reality.
How to get motivated again: If you want to create
something different to what you’ve been experiencing, it’s not enough
to just know what you don’t want. You need to know what you want
instead, and you need to articulate a clear and specific vision of what
you want to create so that you can become familiar with that new
outcome and feel comfortable to move towards it. Take some time to
articulate what you want and why you want it.
4.) You’re demotivated by a values-conflict
Your values are what’s important to you in life. If you have a
values conflict it means that there are two or more values that are
important to you but you feel that you can’t satisfy all of those
values in a particular situation. This causes you to feel conflicted
and pulled in different directions as you try to find ways to get
what’s important to you. You might have brief spurts of motivation to
work on something and then lose motivation and start working on
something else or your motivation might dry up altogether because the
energy of dealing with internal conflict quickly tires you out and saps
your motivation.
How to get motivated again: You need to unpack your
values-conflict and play mediator to get the parts of you that are
advocating for different values to play on the same team again. Start
with acknowledging the internal conflict. Grab a piece of paper and
draw a line down the middle so that you have two columns. Write about
the two different directions you feel pulled in, one in each column and
summarize it with a statement of what each part wants. Now pick one
column and chunk it up; “Why does this part want that? What does it
hope to get as a result of having that?” Keep asking the question and
writing your answers until you feel that you’ve hit on the end result
that part ultimately wants. Now do the same for the other part and
notice when you get to the level where the answers in the two columns
are the same.
Ultimately, when you chunk up, all of the parts of yourself always
want the same thing, because they’re all you. Now that you know what
you really want, you can evaluate the strategies that each part had been advocating for and decide which strategy would work best.
Often once you’re clear on what you really want, you spot new
strategies for getting it that you hadn’t noticed before. Sometimes by
doing this exercise you’ll find ways to satisfy all of your values, but
sometimes that’s not possible. If you’ve taken time to think through
your values and you’ve consciously chosen to prioritize a particular
value over your other values for a while, this clarity will ease the
internal conflict and your motivation will return.
5.) You’re demotivated by lack of autonomy
We thrive on autonomy. We all have a decision-making center in our
brains and this part of us needs to be exercised. Studies have found
that this decision-making center in the brain is under-developed in
people who have depression and that, by practicing using this part of
the brain and making decisions, depression often clears.
In his book, Drive,
Daniel Pink writes about the research that shows that when it comes to
doing creative work, having some autonomy to decide what we do, when we
do it, how we do it and who we do it with is core to igniting and
sustaining motivation, creativity and productivity.
How to get motivated again: Consider how much
autonomy you have in relation to the goals you’ve been trying to
pursue. Are there areas where you feel constricted and controlled?
Consider how you could gradually introduce more autonomy in your task,
time, technique, location and team, and then if you’re employed, have a
discussion with your manager and ask for greater autonomy in a few
specific areas of your work.
6.) You’re demotivated by lack of challenge
Challenge is another crucial ingredient for motivation that authors like Daniel Pink and Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, author of “Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience,”
highlight. When it comes to dealing with challenges, there’s a sweet
spot. Too great a challenge and the fear becomes too great and saps our
motivation (see point 1), and if the challenge is too small, we quickly
get bored and struggle to stay motivated. We’re designed to be living,
growing creatures and we need constant challenge and opportunities to
master new skills. Without challenge, our Essential Self steps in and
demotivates us as a way of telling us that we’ve departed from the path
that’s right for us.
How to get motivated again: Review your goals and
the projects you’re working on. Are they challenging you? Are they
going to require you to grow in order to achieve them or are you
treading water in your comfort zone doing only the things you know you
can do? Try tweaking your goals to make them a bit more challenging,
take on projects that will require you to grow and find a new thing or
two to learn to stimulate yourself.
7.) You’re demotivated by grief
At the beginning of any change, we go through a phase of wondering
if we should or could hang onto the way things were and grieving what
we’d be losing if we make significant changes. Confusion, self-doubt,
mistrust of the world around us and feeling lost are common symptoms
and the bigger the change, the more powerful these symptoms. Sometimes
we even go through a bit of depression and social withdrawal. Martha
Beck calls this the “Death and Rebirth” phase of change in her book, Finding Your Own North Star. With all the grieving and fearing and feeling lost that goes on in this phase, it’s normal for your motivation to dry up.
How to get motivated again: If you’ve just
experienced a trauma or loss, or are going through a major change and
finding that there are days where you’re hit hard with Death and
Rebirth symptoms, don’t try to make make yourself motivated and
proactive. You can’t rush grieving and the undoing of your old life and
ways of thinking and you can’t skip the Death and Rebirth phase and go
straight into Dreaming and Scheming.
You need to give yourself a lot of space for nurturing and
reflection. Look after your body with good food, rest and exercise.
Express your grief, confusion and fears with people who can listen
lovingly. Spend time in nature and with calm, loving people to center
yourself. Accept every feeling and thought you have – they’re all
normal and safe. Take one day at a time and go easy on yourself.
Confusion, forgetfulness and clumsiness are all normal in this stage.
The grieving will end when it’s ready and if you relax into it and
express your grief, it’ll be sooner rather than later.
8.) You’re demotivated by loneliness
This is an especially important one for those of us who work alone
from home. You know those days when you feel a bit cabin-feverish, you
just don’t feel like working and you’d rather be out having a drink
with a friend or playing a game of soccer? Well perhaps it’s because
we’re designed to be social creatures and sometimes your Essential Self
is just longing for some connection with other people and so it steps
in and hi-jacks your work motivation so that you’ll take a break from
work and go and spend some time with other people and give your
Essential Self what it needs.
How to get motivated again: Take a break and go and spend some time with someone you enjoy. You may be surprised at the motivating impact
this has and find yourself much more clear and productive when you
return to your work. And then look for ways that you can begging to
build more networking and joint venturing into your work.
9.) You’re demotivated by burn-out
Since I attract over-achieving Type A’s, and as a recovering Type A
myself, I know that sometimes we’re banging on about wanting to get
more done even after we’ve exceeded the limit on what’s sustainable.
If you’re feeling tired all the time, have lost your energy for
socializing, and the idea of taking a snooze sounds more compelling
than the stuff you’re usually interested in, then you’ve probably
pushed yourself too long and hard and you may be burned out.
Your Essential Self will always work to motivate you to move towards
what you most need and away from goals, projects and ways of working
that take you away from what your Essential Self craves. So if you’re
burned out and needing sleep, your Essential Self may even sap the
motivation from the things that you’re usually really ignited about –
just to get you to meet your core needs again.
How to get motivated again: Sleep. And then when
you’re done sleeping and the quality of your thinking has been
restored, check back in with your Essential Self about what’s most
important to you, hang out here on Charlie’s blog, pick up The Dojo, and start to build sustainable ways of doing more of what’s important to you.
10.) You’re demotivated by not knowing what to do next
Your end-goal might be nice and clear, but if you haven’t taken time
to chunk your end-goal down into smaller goals, you’ll get stuck,
confused and demotivated when it’s time to take action. Some projects
are small and familiar enough that they don’t need a plan, but if
you’re often worrying that you don’t know what to do next and you don’t
have a clear plan, then this might be the source of your demotivation.
How to get motivated again: If you want to keep
your motivation flowing steadily through all stages of your projects,
take time to create clear project plans and to schedule your plans into your calendar.
Use your fears to point you to the potential risks you need to
manage in your plan. Write down all your, “I-don’t-know-how-to”
concerns and turn these into research questions. The first part of any
planning stage is research, and you’ll find new research questions
along the way, so realize that conducting research should be part of
your action plan at every stage of your project. Finally, ask yourself
what smaller goals need to be achieved for you to achieve your end-goal
and schedule deadlines for yourself.
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