Feeling overwhelmed isn’t always a workload problem. Often, it’s an absence of system problem, or rather, lack of a system.
Why we feel overwhelmed
Everything stays in the mind
When tasks pile up in the mind, each becomes a notification at its own time. This mental burden exhausts the mind regardless of the actual physical work required.
No order
When everything looks equally important, you don’t know where to begin. Lack of order creates overwhelm itself.
Overwhelm is a system problem
In my framework, continuity, the second pillar, means transforming intention into a structure that doesn’t depend on emotional state. A good system frees the mind from carrying everything.
How to reduce overwhelm
1. Get tasks out of your head
Write them in one trusted place. This alone frees the mind.
2. Rank loosely but approximately
No need for complete order. A simple ranking suffices for the purpose.
3. Return to a simple system
Don’t seek “perfection.” Return to a simple list and clear priorities. The system carries what willpower alone can’t.
What’s next?
Overwhelm is evidence of a missing system, not personal weakness. Building the system is the core of the second pillar.
Next step: Read the Method
Frequently Asked Questions
Does writing down tasks reduce overwhelm?
Yes, you can feel overwhelmed with fewer tasks if you don’t know where to begin. Clarity matters more than quantity.
What if the real cause was workload not the system?
Confirm if the real cause is workload, not workload. You might need clear support, not just a system.
How do I start when everything is jumbled?
Choose just one. Any beginning frees the mind better than staying in thinking.



