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How to Close Your Mental Tabs for Peace of Mind
Minimize overwhelm in 3 easy steps
I both love and hate completing things.
šš»āāļø On the one hand, thereās satisfaction and confidence in being able to see things through to the end
š š»āāļø On the other hand, thereās a sense of dread and obligation that makes finishing tasks hard for me
Compounded by the fact that my brain is a constant buzz of distractions and stimulus, itās hard to even keep track of what is actually occupying my mind.
Itās a chaotic mess in there (hello ADHD!)
At any given moment my brain has a million metaphorical ābrowser tabsā openā¦.
ā¦.the new business idea
ā¦.the trip I still need to book
ā¦.the email I was supposed to write
ā¦.the call Iāve been avoiding
ā¦.the laundry that needs to be done
ā¦.the random topic Iām hyper-fixated on

Needless to say, this habit of constantly opening new mental tabs and never CLOSING them takes a mental and physical toll on me.
It usually manifests as:
overwhelm
anxiety
stress
interrupted sleep
teeth grinding
gut issues
shallow breathing
tightness in my shoulders
tension headaches
My poor body attempting to communicate my mental distress through physical symptoms.
And after a prolonged state of distressā¦it often devolves into burnout š©
Sound familiar?
Over the years, Iāve developed some helpful tools and systems to close out my mental tabs more efficiently. (Before overwhelm sets in)
Even if youāre not consciously aware of the toll your open tabs are having in your lifeā¦
Itās like a candle you left unattendedā¦out of sight until it burns your whole house down š„š„š„ Oops!
Which is why learning how to effectively close out your mental tabs can be a game changer in terms of mental, emotional, and physical wellbeing.
If youāre wanting (and struggling to find)ā¦.
Clarity to take action
A deeper sense of peace
More calm and less anxiety
A sense of accomplishment
Mental space to focus
Energy for creation
ā¦.it probably means you have some outstanding open tabs in your mind!
Your mental clutter is taking up Ā« s p a c e ! Ā»
And you need space to invite NEW opportunities, ideas, and thoughts that feel fun, manageable and aligned.
So letās get started!
Hereās my āMENTAL TAB CLOSINGā method I started implementing to get more clarity + peace when my mind is abuzz with too many unclosed tabs and to-do listsā¦.
STEP 1: TAKE FULL INVENTORY š
The closing of mental tabs starts with a process I lovingly call āvomit everything outā.
I know, itās a gross visual, but the gist is this: externalize every single piece of thought, task, project, idea that is currently swirling around in your head rent-free.
Purpose: acknowledge and shine a light on everything thatās been hiding in the shadows of your mind. You have to see what youāre working with here.
Execution: Write it down on paper, onto post-its, on a whiteboard, typed up, whatever! As long as you can visually see itā¦.thatās the point! Itās no longer living INSIDE your head, but OUTSIDE in the world
STEP 2: CATEGORIZE/SORT šļø
Now that you have your list, youāre able to begin the task of streamlining your thoughts by priority. In this step, youāll be able to choose if you want to keep, delete, delegate or snooze so you can free up some memory and brain power.
Purpose: Prioritize whatās actually important to action right now, and remove or create an opportunity to revisit less urgent items later. Youāre starting to free up some valuable mental space and releasing the mental load youāve been carrying.
Execution: Go through each item on your list and decide if you want toā¦
Keep - What is something youāve been thinking about that NEEDS to be done urgently? Think in terms of timelines.
Whatās the most urgent today, next few days, next few weeks? THENā¦.ask yourself itās something youāre able to action yourself easily?
In summary, if itās 1) urgent (time wise), 2) important AND 3) something youāre willing and able to take action onā¦.itās in the ākeepā category.
Delegate - What are the things that is urgent and needs to get done, but youāre unable or unwilling to take action on.
Example: boring things you keep putting off, or your gap in knowledge is causing delays..
Snooze - What are the things on this list that are importantā¦but the DEADLINE isnāt until next month, next quarter, by the end of the year?
Categorize these things separately and schedule a future date in your calendar to review these at that moment.
For example, I like to schedule an email to myself using Boomerang for Gmail or Future Me for the next month or 2 months out so I can deal with it later without it swirling in my head right now.
Delete - these are the other things on your list that hasnāt been categorized yetā¦.
Ask yourself āis it absolutely 1000% necessary for me to keep thinking about this?ā
Can you and are you willing to let it go?
Example: You keep meaning to ātake that salsa classā but never get around to itā¦.just let it go! Itās not urgent and at this point itās just causing you stress.
A key indicator something needs to be deleted from my mind is if I keep hitting āsnoozeā on the thought more than 3x in a row. If itās important itāll come back into my mind, I can let it go for now.
STEP 3: START CLOSING TABS! āļø
Now letās do something about your category of action items! The priority list shows us where to begin and what needs to just be snoozed or deleted off our plate. Peace is in sight!
Purpose: Clearing mental space by closing outstanding items from your mind and build momentum. Once you get going, itāll feel like relief with each thing you check off
Execution:
Start with ākeepā pile first - tackle a few smaller āeasy winsā you can complete quickly. TIME to completion is the focus first
The goal is to gamify and create a āwinning streakā so your mind will feel the dopamine as you begin to close your mental tabs
For example, today in my ākeepā pile I have a range of thingsā¦.from writing this very email (about a 1hr task), making my bed (5 min task), replying to a client email (10 min task), and sending an invoice (15 min task)
Iām gonna start with the quickest wins first to get momentum going so itāll look like: make my bed, reply to client email, send invoice, thenā¦..this email!
If I had started with writing this email, I would get overwhelmed or discouraged and itāll remain an open tab
Next, look at your ādelegateā pile - who can you hire to get this off your plate?
Who has the knowledge to help you close these open action items? Can you empower your family, team, partner, children to assist?
For example, Iāve been meaning to help my parents book their flights but because Iām overwhelmed with other obligations, I asked my brother to assist and heās already quickly completed the task for me!
Go ahead and look at this category and assign the task to someone else or identify someone who can help you complete these
For the āsnoozeā list - go ahead and schedule a time in the future to deal with this list later
I like to set up an actual calendar reminder and time block 1hr to review and recategorize these a month or two ahead of the deadline
For the ādeleteā list - let it go! (seriously)
If itās truly important, you can add it to your longterm āsnoozeā list, but if you notice you keep delaying itā¦.itās not actually important to you!
Or if you have anxiety about truly deleting it, start a separate document/file āwish listā of things youāll eventually get to if youāre bored but not at all important enough to keep thinking about it
I hope this was helpful! REPLY and let me knowā¦did this resonated with you?
Cheering you on!
Your clarity coach,
Hana
P.S. If thereās a much bigger āopen tabā on your mindā¦.
Like starting a business, navigating a big career pivot, or integrating a new life transition (like motherhood, marriage/divorce, etc.) let me help you focus on getting it done!
ā ā I have 2 open spots to work with my privatelyā¦if youāre curious to see if this is a right fit for you, go ahead and book a free discovery call with me HERE.
P.P.S. If group coaching is more your thing, Re:Boot trained facilitator Dilan is leading the next āClarify Your Pathā cohort next week!
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