I wanted to do it all. For years, I believed thriving meant excelling everywhere simultaneously. But the math never worked: if I stayed home taking care of my kids, I missed out on social activities with friends. If I focused more on my career, I had less bandwidth for volunteering in my community. When I prioritized getting enough sleep, my inbox overflowed. When I finally cleared my inbox, I'd skipped my workouts for a week.
I chased perfect balance with the intensity of someone who measures worth by output and completion. Until I discovered that I found more joy and more peace in doing less.
Not less effort. Not less intention. But less everywhere at once. When I stopped trying to optimize every area of life simultaneously and focused on what my current season actually required, something shifted. The guilt dissolved. The exhaustion eased. And the wellbeing I was chasing? It finally showed up - not through addition, but through subtraction and focus. I moved from FOMO to JOMO - the Fear Of Missing Out, was replaced by the Joy Of Missing Out, knowing that I made an intentional decision about where to place my precious, finite time and attention.
Gallup research identifies five interconnected elements that shape overall wellbeing: Career (liking what you do every day), Social (having meaningful friendships), Financial (effectively managing your economic life), Physical (having good health and energy), and Community (feeling connected to where you live and wanting to contribute to it).
These elements influence each other - improving one often lifts others. But here's what the research also shows, and what I've learned through experience: you can't actively develop all five with equal intensity at the same time.
You have finite energy, time, and attention. Strategic prioritization isn't giving up - it's being wise about what your current season requires. The goal isn't balance. It's intentional focus on whichever element needs you most right now.
Someone navigating early parenthood might focus intensely on managing exhaustion and building financial stability - while friendships and community involvement temporarily coast. Someone facing a career transition might pour energy into professional development and maintaining key relationships - while the volunteer work pauses. Someone dealing with health challenges concentrates on recovery and medical bills - while career ambitions shift to maintenance mode.
None of these choices represent failure - they represent wisdom about your current season of life. Recognizing and accepting who we are and the circumstances in which we find ourselves.
This blog series will explore each wellbeing element in depth over the coming weeks. But first, you need a framework for deciding where to focus your limited energy.
Introducing "Notice It, Name It, Spark It"
This three-step tool helps you identify which wellbeing element deserves your attention right now and take meaningful action without overwhelming yourself.
Pay attention to what's calling for your focus. Your body, relationships, and circumstances send signals constantly - you just need to listen.
Ask yourself:
Try this practice: Track your wellbeing honestly for one week. Each evening, rate how you're doing with your work satisfaction, key relationships, financial stress, physical energy, and community connection. Use a simple scale: thriving, struggling, or suffering or turn to a feelings wheel to put a name to what you're currently feeling. Patterns will emerge quickly from these data points.
Chronic exhaustion points to one need. Persistent loneliness signals another. Financial anxiety that won't quiet suggests a different priority. Career dread on Sunday evenings tells you where to look. Disconnection from purpose or community signals yet another focus area.
Once you've noticed what needs attention, name it clearly and without judgment. Say it out loud or write it down:
Naming your priority does three things:
Be specific about what's missing. Don't just say "I need better health." Name it: "I need seven hours of sleep" or "I need to move my body daily" or "I need to manage stress before it accumulates."
And please know, sometimes this part can be hard. We don't always want to admit (even to ourselves) what wellbeing area is lacking and what we truly need. But it's a necessary step to growth and thriving.
Once you've noticed and named your priority, spark improvement with small, sustainable action. Not a complete life overhaul - one manageable change that addresses your identified need.
Choose actions that:
Quick examples:
The spark isn't the solution - it's the beginning. Small actions build momentum, create confidence, and often reveal the next right step.
Over the next five weeks, we'll explore each wellbeing element in depth - what thriving looks like, research-backed practices to strengthen it, and how leaders can support it for their teams. Each blog will include "Notice It, Name It, Spark It" guidance specific to that element.
Here's what you can expect:
Each post builds on this foundation - helping you apply strategic focus to the element that needs you most right now.
If you're tired of wellbeing advice that adds to your overwhelm instead of reducing it, this series is for you. Subscribe to the blog now so each new post arrives in your inbox. You'll get practical tools, research-backed insights, and permission to focus on what actually matters in your current season.
Your starting point for today:
Before the next blog arrives, take 10 minutes to notice where you are right now:
You don't need perfect wellbeing across all five elements. You need honest awareness of what needs attention now, clear naming of your priority, and small actions that spark improvement.
Subscribe to continue this journey toward sustainable wellbeing - one intentional focus at a time.