What happens when you are struggling, when things are tense and difficult, when you know that your life at a given moment isn’t quite working? People have different strategies.
Some of us look inward and try to find a way forward from there. Some of us instead lift up our heads, look at what’s around, and try to figure out what’s wrong—and then possibly come to a different understanding of the problem and a different way of approaching it. Still others also look outward, but only for something or someone to blame.
And then there’s the double-down: You work twice as hard at whatever you’re doing and don’t ever look up. Which means that you’re likely to miss the need for a course correction, and will fail to see that the landscape has changed.
We used to joke about the importance of “working harder, working faster.” That’s the essence of doubling down. You keep accelerating along a path that isn’t quite right and certainly doesn’t feel that way. You can’t figure out what exactly is wrong—that is, what’s off about your career or your life as a whole. But you figure that everything gets better if you simply work harder, so why not do just that?
There’s a lot of doubling down going on right now. In every area, people are continuing to work harder in the exact same that they’ve always been working. And all the while, they believe that somehow they will be able to pull out of the spiral with…some more hard work. They continue to block out the nagging feeling that it doesn’t feel right. (It feels, in fact, like digging a hole.)
We double down in every aspect of our lives. It’s funny how, these days, it’s hard even to take a walk without needing to have a conversation as well—usually, by cellphone. When in double-down mode, we don’t allow ourselves to be in one moment at a time, to actually be when and where we are. Putting yourself with the person you are talking to instead being right there, seeing what you can draw from.
It’s kind of the antithesis of meditation. And as we practice this anti-meditative state of being, we keep running, keep doubling down, keep feeling like we’re unproductively racing around, not going anywhere.
So what I’m pledging to do here is stop doubling down. Instead, I am going to slow down and see what’s around me. See who, what, and where makes sense, and why. I’m going to slow down for all of that.
I’m going to stop trying to be in two places at one time.
What about you?