Letters To Myself: Relationships in a Busy World

As I begin to write these letters to myself, this being the first of many, I will preface the concept with a set of lessons I have gathered over my time and things I wish I had known a lot sooner. These posts, along with short form videos posted will share these small drops of wisdom so that someone else may benefit. They may not be polished, but life hardly is, and I think there is something to be said about the ruggedness of a lesson.

One of the leaders in my life had a sticker on her laptop that emphasized relationships first. In this case it was a sticky note that read something along the lines of “Relationships before work.” I had always thought it was an interesting, but until about a month ago, I didn’t actually understand why. Despite believing that I had a firm grasp on what seemed like a simple subject, I was very quickly proven my assumptions were false.

About a month ago I had asked my best friend, because she is an artist, to join a project I want to work on. I was quickly met with a “No”. The reason? I had previously offered to help give insight for a project that she had been working on. In my desire to keep myself busy in between college, work and life I was so heavily focused on myself and what I was doing that I let the relationships in my life suffer.

This was a sharp slap in the face that I had been so hyper-focused on everything else in my life I had just expected everyone in my life to be a static piece to my dynamic puzzle. She was not the only one either, I let it bleed over into other friendships and even romantic relationships where I continued to fill my schedule to the brim. Task and project, one after another took time from my day as I walked away from the people in my life.

Coming from a point of reflection now, I can see that in many ways I expected people to be there for me when I was hardly ever there for them. In training for affective needs education we are taught that we cannot pull from an empty bank and need to build a healthy and positive relationship with children before you begin to correct or apply consequences for behavior.

This applies in all aspects of life, and now I understand that the work will always be there, the universe will always reward someone who works hard with more work to complete. However, we cannot assume the same of relationships, people will not pour energy into someone who does not reciprocate the effort.

When it comes to the concept of “relationships first” it is always important to remind ourselves that the work will always be there, but the people in our lives, and our relationships with them, require us to apply equal effort to thrive and grow. If we fail to respect our relationships we may turn around one day to see that they have left us behind and the connection has withered, and that is not a regret I would like to have later on in life.

Embrace Authenticity: The Key to First Impressions

Daily writing prompt
What’s the first impression you want to give people?

I have found that I have stopped caring, specifically, about the impression that I give people. There are people I have met who think I am fundamentally slow, mentally and physically because I am quiet. Then if you talk to anyone who has spent more than 5 minutes getting to know me you will find a completely different person depicted. I never go into meeting someone with the intention of catering or offering a specific impression. What people see is what people get.

I am sure there are places that this has bitten me in the backside, but at the same time there are places that it has been a benefit. My goal is to go into every situation with the most raw and real version of me that I have to offer. If I blend into the situation or group of people then we may see a relationship and continued success, if I don’t? Then it wasn’t for me.

Why should I bother with how people are going to view me if I can be unapologetically myself, and I know at the end of the day that I have held myself to my own standards. Remember that you do not owe anyone your time, opinions or value it is either given at cost or freely and that is a choice we get to make as individuals. I don’t want to force myself into a box so that people can satisfy their own biases or opinions just so that the interaction goes smoothly.

Life is simple: treat everyone with respect, expect it, but never demand it back. Cause no harm to others and be the kindest and realest version of yourself. Anyone else who wants you to fit a lock-step generally does not have anything but their own interests at heart, and that is something you do not need in your life. Life’s too short to worry about social opinions, be you and never apologize for it.

Unlocking the Power of Influence by Cialdini

Daily writing prompt
What book are you reading right now?

Currently the book that I am reading, which I believe that everyone should read is: Influence by Robert Cialdini. Even if you do not find yourself in sales, or a position in which you are marketing yourself to others, it is an invaluable book to read. It helps showcase how the decisions that companies make, may influence your daily choices.

When it comes to every choice we are bombarded with a variety of influences, from scents and sounds to specific phrasings. We all find ourselves filtering every option through social norms, our own biases and even the likability of whoever we are talking to, and most of us are ignorant to the subtleties of social interaction.

If you don’t understand the psychology of influence, you are susceptible to it. Break free from the herd, and find yourself free to be your own person, conscious of your own decisions and external factors of persuasion.