Jul
Filling Buckets
Posted in reflecting | No Comments »Empty buckets.
We all deal with them from time-to-time. It doesn’t mean we’re sad or depressed or unhappy. It just means we’re not putting any fuel in our tanks.
For some, fuel is solitude.
For some, fuel is accomplishments.
For some, fuel is adventure.
For some, fuel is exercise.
For some, fuel is people.
It’s important to know what your fuel is. I only know because it took me 35 years to figure out that my tank runs on people.
What happens when you don’t know what your fuel is? You might get depressed. You might get crabby. You likely won’t feel fulfilled.
And, everyone has a different kind of fuel.
The thoughts are front and center for me this week because I was a task machine…got a ton of work done. But, I decided to work from home. And neither my husband, nor roommates were home. For me, one day of solitude is good. Two days gets exhausting. Three days makes me restless. Four days makes me crabby. Five days makes me hypersensitive. And, pretty soon, I find myself in a spiral of not wanting to be around anyone, yet knowing that people are my fuel.
My guess is that the cycle is similar for anyone who doesn’t know what their fuel is…or doesn’t take steps to fill it.
Remember, we all need fuel…and fuel isn’t a crutch. Your fuel is probably tied to the strengths of who you are as a human being.
Sponges will come along and dry up your fuel. And that’s to be expected. But we always want to be sure there’s something in the bucket…otherwise we’ll be left bone dry…with nothing left to give.
Fuel up, my friends.

