Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Overwhelmed Parents

My subject today involves the very tricky art of saying no when someone asks something of us. My story begins with our 4 year old who just began a new preschool, one that my partner and I are very enthusiastic about. The school has a focus on community which is why I originally fell in love with it. As the year began I started to notice that I also felt overwhelmed by it. In the first week emails filled my box with news of upcoming potlucks, volunteer opportunities, family days at the park, policies and procedures, new parents night, open house night, info on how to be a peanut free school etc. . . I was able to remain in balance as I reassured myself that I had power and control to pick and choose one or two opportunities and feel that I had done my part. Quickly I lost my bearings and became uncomfortably consumed with pressure to sign up for all the events. Then I was asked to be a room parent. Yes I was flattered, but the commitment to that responsibility just tipped the scale. So how do we say no? How do we say no and feel clear and guilt free. So many of us are committed to activities, professional responsibilities, committees, groups and relationships because we think we "should" or that it simply feels too difficult to say no. When we are overbooked life flies by in front of our eyes. We lose the ability to be present with what and who we cherish. We focus more on that our child isn't putting on his or her shoe then on the amazingly creative song he/she is spontaneously composing in front of our eyes. We forget to give our spouse/partner a kiss (with feeling) in the morning because our mind is so full of all that we want to accomplish. When overbooked we are rarely "there" with where we are because we are always anticipating the next thing. I fear that living a life which is too full can lead to regrets later in life. In my situation I was eventually able to decline the opportunity to be a room parent. I think I was able to do so because I took a little time to sweep the obligation and guilt out of the way and examined the situation to see if this would be a commitment that would also benefit my life. The answer was ultimately no. I sensed that I would much rather participate in other events like cooking fun meals for class potlucks, attend the fall festival or help individual families that I personally connected to. I also believed that someone else would do a wonderful job and when the right opportunity comes along I would have the energy to pursue it. How do all of you out there say no? Do you say no? Till next time . . .

3 comments:

ida plotkin said...

I am having trouble signing in. i posted a comment but now I am having to post it again. did you get my first comment. let's see if this goes through

Shana Hiranandani said...

Thanks for persevering on leaving a comment! I’ll check into why it is so tricky to do.
- Shana

ProfSharon said...

I went on sabbatical recently in Spain, and brought back what was told to me as the "way of life" there: people work to live, not live to work. I no longer have small children; although I work with those who do and with those who care for small children in rooms that need "room parents"; but I still have to say no quite often. A busy volunteer seems to be the first person everyone wants to ask first. I think that doing what we can is what is important. For some parents, that's baking cookies once a year; for others it's being the room parent with many tasks a day or week. How we choose to spend time for and with our children on their behalf needs to be a decision we make from the heart without guilt.