Left to my own devices, I’m the type of person who has a contingency plan.
And a contingency plan for my contingency plan.
My brand of anxiety likes to plan for any and all eventualities.
Some of these comfort me: like knowing what items to grab from my apartment should a natural disaster occur.
And others just take up room in my mind: like knowing what I’d want on my playlist for the aforementioned disaster.
This compulsive need to plan impacted every area of my life.
For example, in my 20s, I had a boyfriend who consistently cancelled plans because he had to work, he overslept, or had a hangover. This annoyed the shit out of me. But, in a well-intentioned effort to “make things work,” I decided to manage my expectations and always have a plan B.
The problem was that long after our relationship ended, the pattern remained. I still needed an alternate plan in case things didn’t work out. Be it a backup job opportunity, a backup friend, or a backup brunch order in case they’re out of bacon (again).
So why is this a bad thing?
In short, it obstructed my ability to create what I truly wanted (Plan A).
Contingency plans aren’t about increasing your chances of success or happiness, they're often about fear. Plan B is all about survival mode. And, not surprisingly, survival mode is not where dreams, creativity, or potential flourish.
Knowing there’s an alternate plan gives us a way out. It protects us from disappointment.
For example, had I stopped having a plan B when he’d cancel, the disappointment may have fueled me to communicate that his behavior didn’t work for me rather than engaging in a codependent tango. (Tango lessons were another thing he didn’t show up for, btw.)
So now, plan A is the only plan I sign up for. I don’t waste my energy on hypothetical plan Bs because it’s less energy that can go into plan A. And much like plan A can’t coexist with plan B, living with passion cannot coexist with fear.
So How Do You Muster The Confidence, Space, And Drive To Go All In?
By consciously redirecting your energy, tapping into that obsessive ability to plan, and directing it toward plan A.