Get Unstuck: Convert “I can't” into “I don't want to”.

Blog post by Kate Bosch, Certified Professional Organizer® owner and founder of Kate Bosch Organizing, Providence, Rhode Island.

Barbara* and I were sitting at her kitchen table considering how to tackle several stacks, baskets, and folders full of old papers. “Do you know what my therapist said to me?” she asked. “She said, ‘What’s the worst that could happen if you just shredded the whole pile?’”

“But I just can’t do that,” she said with a wide-eyed look of horror. “I just CAN’T!”

Barbara likes to be on top of things in her life, but in the past few years, she had lost a loved one, moved into a smaller place, and weathered the pandemic. Understandably, the paperwork (bills, receipts, tasks, notes, etc.) had just gotten away from her.

“Well, technically, you can, right?” I gently asked Barbara. “I mean, you’re physically capable of throwing them away. It’s really that you don’t want to."

"You’re a very conscientious person and that pile represents things you feel you should do, know about, or save. You want to be a person who takes care of your incoming papers, but life got stressful and the papers piled up. Now you have a backlog to deal with and you’re anxious about handling it the right way.”

Barbara nodded. “That’s right,” she said. “I like to take care of things in a certain way. I like to be aware of what’s coming in and make sure I’m doing things the right way.”

“So,” I asked, “If you don’t want to throw all the papers away without looking through them, what do you want to do instead?”

I CAN, BUT I DON’T WANT TO
As Barbara and I brainstormed, the scared look left her face. She was now back in control and ready to come up with a solution.

When presented with a drastic proposal, we often put up the roadblock of “CAN’T,” which leads to paralysis. In reality, it’s not that you “can’t” do something, it’s that you don’t want to do it.

When you say “I can’t,” the situation is controlling you. “I don’t want to” acknowledges that you can choose what to do. Saying “I don’t want to” puts you in the driver’s seat.

WHY DON’T I WANT TO?
To move forward, figure out why you don’t want to do it. Here’s why Barbara didn’t want to pitch all the papers:
I like to know what everything is before I get rid of it.
I might find something I was missing.
I fear getting rid of something important.
I want to be a person who does things the right way.

Knowing Barbara’s motivation for wanting to look through all the papers sped up the process. We defined what she could let go of and easily recognized the special things she wanted to save.

Once you know your motivation, you can come up with a better solution that works for you.

In the end, Barbara did decide to throw away an entire stack of papers without having to examine each one because they all belonged to the “notes to self” category that she decided she could live without. The confident smile on her face as she tossed them into the “shred” bag was priceless!

Post written by Faithful Organizer member Kate Bosch. Kate is a Certified Professional Organizer®, and owner of Kate Bosch Professional Organizing. As a Certified Professional Organizer®,  Kate helps her clients sort through their things, determine what they really value and want to keep, and find simple, creative ways to store everything neatly so they can maintain it with ease.

Her eclectic background — B.A. from Yale University in Art History, Assistant Buyer of Bras and Shapewear (aka girdles! at Filene's, milliner (hat maker) and owner of shoe and hat store Head Over Heels in New Hampshire, stay-at-home mom of two girls, and wife to her great artist/professor husband makes her able to organize all different kinds of homes and situations. She’s juggled lots of different things in her life, so she gets that you're struggling with things too!

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