Two-Minute Resets for Overwhelm, Procrastination, and Getting Back on Track
Ever find yourself scrolling social media even while a part of your brain is begging you to stop? Or staring at your to-do list so long that suddenly reorganizing pens feels like a reasonable life choice?
In this episode, Shannon and Janine talk about the surprisingly powerful little resets that can help when you feel stuck, overwhelmed, distracted, paralyzed, or just mentally done. And the best part? Most of them take about two minutes.
They share the tiny things that help them shift gears: writing in a bullet journal, clearing off a desk, walking away for a minute, petting a pet, drinking water, climbing stairs, stretching, and even bouncing a ball against the wall for physical therapy. It’s all about getting unstuck without turning it into another perfectionistic self-improvement project.
WHAT WE TALK ABOUT
* 01:46 — Why even tiny interruptions can help you refocus
* 02:29 — Shannon’s trick for escaping a social-media rabbit hole without fighting herself
* 03:29 — The “what do I do next?” feeling and decision paralysis at work
* 05:24 — Using a bullet journal and longhand writing to sort out uncertainty fast
* 08:17 — How desk clutter affects focus and mental space
* 10:06 — Why lack of planning can create overwhelm
* 11:42 — The power of physically stepping away from your workspace
* 12:20 — Einstein played violin when he got stuck — why changing mental gears helps
* 13:23 — Hydration, stretching, and tiny physical interruptions that reset your brain
* 18:10 — The therapeutic benefits of finding and petting a very soft cat
KEY TAKEAWAYS
* When you’re stuck in a doomscrolling loop or overwhelm spiral, you often don’t need a huge intervention — just enough of a shift to interrupt the pattern.
* Writing things out by hand can quickly uncover what you already know but are second-guessing.
* Clearing even a tiny amount of physical clutter can create more mental breathing room.
* Movement helps. That can mean stairs, stretching, walking outside, physical therapy exercises, or chasing your dog around the dining room table.
* Planning ahead helps reduce overwhelm, but when you’ve fallen off track, revisiting your existing lists can help you reorient quickly.
* A “reset” doesn’t have to be productive to work. Sometimes drinking water, reading a page of a book, or petting a cat is exactly what your brain needs.
THE BOTTOM LINE
When you’re overwhelmed, distracted, or frozen, it’s easy to think you need a perfect system, a huge burst of motivation, or a completely free day to get back on track. But often, what actually helps is much smaller and gentler than that.
A two-minute reset won’t solve everything. But it can break the spell. It can shift your attention just enough to help you remember what matters, reconnect with yourself, or take the next tiny step.
So the next time you feel stuck, try one small thing: clear a corner of your desk, write a few sentences by hand, walk up the stairs, drink a glass of water, or go find a very soft cat.
WANT MORE LIKE THIS
Episode 84: Overthinking [https://getting-to-good-enough.captivate.fm/episode/episode-84-overthinking]
A great companion to this episode if your brain loves turning simple decisions into full-scale mental marathons. Shannon and Janine talk about how perfectionism fuels overthinking — and how to stop getting trapped in it.
Episode 173: Keeping Commitments to Yourself [https://getting-to-good-enough.captivate.fm/episode/episode-173-keeping-commitments-to-yourself]
This episode pairs beautifully with the “tiny resets” theme. Shannon and Janine discuss rebuilding self-trust, making things easier to restart, and focusing on the smallest doable action instead of waiting to feel perfectly motivated.
Episode 243: Are We Having Fun Yet? [https://getting-to-good-enough.captivate.fm/episode/episode-243-are-we-having-fun-yet]
A lighter, laughter-filled conversation about making everyday life more enjoyable — including finding fun ways to do things you’d otherwise avoid. Also features another appearance by Shannon’s cat Cleo.
CONNECT WITH US
If this episode resonated, we’d love to hear from you.
How does this show up in your life? What helps—even just a little?
* Leave us a voicemail: 413-424-GTGE (4843)
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* Email: gettingtogoodenough@gmail.com
* Watch the conversation on YouTube! [https://youtu.be/uKHfWgxADg8]