3:09PM 7:21 SUMMARY KEYWORDS ball, important, extracurricular activity, plastic, glass, matters, sanity, efficient, tend, nora roberts, practice, shattered glass, juggling, easier, video, shiny, family, emptier, system, mom SPEAKERS Patricia Sung Patricia Sung 00:03 Hey there, Mama. Welcome back module eight on frequently asked questions. This video is carrying the question, I still don't have enough time, what do I cut? Am I trying to do too much? Am I not being efficient? Like, what's the problem here? My answer is probably both. As you sort out your day and your calendar and your routines and all and you build in the habits and make everything run more efficiently, yes, you will have more time because you're doing those things in a more like in a more efficient way, it's going to be faster, and that will get easier. But also, like, Mom plates are really full. There's never a shortage of stuff for us to do for our families. And there's always another volunteer opportunity, there's always another extracurricular activity to do. And there will come a point where it's just too much, and you do need to cut things out. Every time we say yes to something, it means we're saying no to something else, and understanding what's important to us and what our values are. And what truly matters to me and to our family as a whole allows us to understand better what we should be saying yes and no to because we're guiding it by our value system. For some people, maybe taking on an extra, extra extracurricular activity is really important for them, because that's where their values lie. But if that's not where your values lie, and then using that time for something else might be so much more valuable, and you'd get so much more out of it. So that depends on you. And as you get to know yourself. And as you get to know your ADHD and you start to see like the pieces fall into place, you'll be able to better gauge what are the things that are more important to you. So that does get easier. But it is, it is true. Whenever we say yes to one thing, we're saying no to something else. I I absolutely love this analogy from Nora Roberts. And you can you can Google that that article. You know, we're juggling all these things, and they all the balls in the air. And a lot of times we think there's like one wall for kids and one ball for work and one ball for family and one ball for friends and one ball for our own well being. And we're we're just trying to keep them all up in the air all the time. But it's not just one ball per person, it's or one ball per responsibility. Within each category. There's multiple walls. So you know, being at your son's soccer practices of all, being at the next game is a ball, doing the laundry is a ball. And you're you're juggling all these things. And she said the key is to know which of those balls are plastic and which are glass, because when you drop the glass ones They shatter. But when you drop the plastic ones, they bounce, and you can pick them up later. So understanding your value system, and what really matters to you. And what matters to your family will allow you to say maybe being at that practice doesn't matter, maybe