Control your concern

I was reminded recently of a helpful distinction Stephen Covey made in The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, which I’ve recreated below:

In the universe of our cares, there are things we can control, things we can influence, and things that concern us, but which we can’t do anything about. Common sense suggests that our energy, creativity, and time is best spent on the innermost circle, with effort applied to the middle circle as interest and opportunity allow.

It suggests we bring order to the little parts of the world we control. That we make beauty and peace where we can.

The challenge is that in stressful times, our emotional energy gets drawn to the outer circle. The things we can’t control start to dominate our thoughts. In the present crisis that’s obvious: people worry for their jobs and financial assets. They worry people they love will get sick. They fear needing a ventilator themselves.

And to compound the cruelty, our obsession with what we can’t control prevents us from doing what’s needed in the domains we can control. We begin to fail our colleagues, our friends, our families. When we dwell on the things we can’t control, we become our worst selves.

The good news is that we can control how much we obsess over what we can’t control. We can govern our thoughts. We can restrict how often we check the news or our investments. We can dial into the lives of our children, of our friends, of strangers who need us now more than ever. We can fill the hours with so much labor in that center circle that we simply don’t have time or energy to fret over what isn’t ours to decide anyway.

All it takes is intention, and a plan. Commit to refocus on what you can control. Turn off the TV. Spend less time on the internet. Calendar more time with your children. You can control how much you worry over what you can’t control. And the first step is committing to do it.

Your quarantine survival kit

Maybe your children are happily ignorant of what’s going on, or maybe they’re worried, and looking to you for assurance. Many of them are home all day now, their schools shuttered into the foreseeable future. It’s a stressful time. Whenever I hear people are being told to shelter in place, I think: I’m a father. I am the shelter.

But what if I’m not enough?

My struggle in crisis is that I worry for my children (their health, their economic future, whether I’ll even be able to provide for them in a year) to the point that I get short-tempered. I grow impatient with their recklessness, intolerant of their foolishness, fed up with their sloppiness. In an ironic twist, my care for them gets transmogrified into unkindness.

Perhaps you face the same struggle.

Photo credit: Markus Spiske

Well, one thing I’ve learned about coping with uncertainty is that we can reduce our stress by creating domains of certainty. We can turn our attention from the things we can’t control to the opportunities all around us to fix, to heal, to teach.

But without a plan, that’s just a nice sentiment. If you’ve been looking through the resources here, and if you get my daily emails, you’ve probably discerned that I’m a big fan of the calendar. If your home life is getting turned upside-down like that of many families, you can inject some immediate certainty by helping your children put together a simple task list for the day. Ask them to come up with some ideas to exercise their minds and bodies, and to have some fun.

While you’re at it, write down some things in your own calendar that you’re going to do with them. Don’t let day after day slip by, especially now, when so many people need the simple reassurance of human contact.

And if you’re wondering what to put on your calendar, below are some resources chock-full of ideas. Whether you make a backyard mortar or find a comfy book to read together, don’t miss the opportunities in this upended world to be the shelter your children need far more than bricks and mortar.

Quarantine survival supplies

Art of Manliness DIY projects: Everything from potato cannons to paper fighter jets.

Arts and Crafts projects: 50 projects that are less dangerous than a potato cannon, but still kind of fun.

Backyard games: Cardboard forts, giant dominoes–there’s something here for everyone.

Exploratorium: Tons of science projects for kids of all ages.

Khan Academy: These people have revolutionized math, science, computer programming, even art history. Sign your kids up and watch them love to learn.

OpenLibrary: With libraries closing across the country, here’s a free resource filled with online books for all ages.

Kanopy: Movies and documentaries available with a library membership, including a host of instructional videos.