Written by: Lola Toppin-Casserly
Since having children five years ago, I tried to juggle career, family and life. And in doing so, I watched space evaporate from my life.
I convinced myself that I was ‘someone’ because I had a career, children, and a husband. But as I ran from one thing to another without space, I began to wonder why on earth I was trying to do it all. My husband and I were exhausted, juggling all the balls we needed to. And what was it all for? Was there a grand purpose to it all? Was I changing the world as a result?
When I realized that the answer to those questions was no and that I was seemingly stuck under a glass ceiling in my leadership career, I knew that something had to change. The exhaustion and the juggling were not worth it. I wanted to create space in my life – for my son starting school, for me, for my husband, for my daughter.
I had been warmed up to the idea of space, purpose and reflection through my time on Toi Whakaari’s Ruku Ao leadership development initiative in 2015. Through experiential development, it taught me to determine what I stood for and who I wanted to be as a leader. The initiative highlighted to me the importance of reflection in leadership, partly through the way the initiative is run, but also through the time spent at Manutuke marae. At that marae, I experienced ‘space’ for the first time, away from the busyness of routine life.
I wondered: if I created more capacity in my life for space and reflection, what further insights and value would emerge?
Over the past five months, I’ve been testing the concept of space. These are the results:
Seeing the wonderful results from creating space in my life, I’ve been considering how I can create more of it.
When I say ‘yes’ to all those personal, family and professional social engagements that deny me of crucial rest and demand rushing from one thing to the other, I deplete space.
When I say ‘no’ more often or build in realistic transition times, and prioritize what is really going to nourish me and provide me with ‘positive flashpoints’, all of a sudden I create and am able to carry myself with, space. Although space is a psychological concept; we can create it when we don’t yet have it physically.
I’ve also noticed the ways in which space is also a physical concept. We can waste space even when we have it physically. When I took three days off work to recover and ground myself after four weeks of caring for my elderly parents, I filled a whole day with housework! Did this create space for me? Certainly not!
The answer for me, I’ve discovered, is to create the space I need. And that’s about listening more closely to my body and my needs, and getting those needs met – something as women, we’re generally not good at. I’m learning that ‘space’ and how we create it, is different for everyone.