Monday, March 16, 2015

The Health Cost of Complexity: the concept of Time Debt

This link from the Harvard Business Review does an outstanding job explaining the concept of "Time Debt."

One of the most common problem I run into with patients is that they have too much on their plate, and this leads to health consequences.  When the body is in a perpetual time debt state, the sympathetic nervous system kicks in, which is something physicians call "sympathetic overload."

The sympathetic nervous system is designed to handle our "fight or flight" response.  This is an appropriate response to being chased by a Tiger, or dealing with the occasional busy work deadline.

However, we as human beings were NOT meant to be in a state of constant "fight or flight," and our body does not handle it well.  Persistent sympathetic flow can lead to agitation, weight gain, poorly healing injuries, heart attacks, and death.

There is a great scene in the movie Parenthood, where Steve Martin's character Gil is confronted with a list of things he needs to do.  His wife asks him if he has to do something, and Gil responds "my whole LIFE is have to."

That sense of HAVING to do things is what drives the sense of Time Debt stress.  What I advocate patients do, to prioritize their health, is to re-evaluate the "Have to" items in their life.

This can often lead to some challenging decisions- you may need to re-evaluate your entire life.   When I was in the my late 30s, I realized my life was filled with too many "Have tos" in my life, which led to my decision to leave Academic Medicine, move across the county, and start prioritizing my own health.

Simplifying your life is not easy to do.   However, just because it is challenging to embrace simplicity doesn't make the concept less important.  It makes embracing simplicity MORE important.

1 comment:

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