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Bold & Eye-Catching

I didn’t hustle harder—I just spent smarter. Here’s the blueprint.

By Saima NazPublished 9 months ago 3 min read

A story about clarity, courage, and creating change without chaos.

At the start of this year, I was burned out—but not from overworking. I was burned out from pretending to be okay. My days were filled with tasks, my nights with scrolling, and my weekends with vague guilt that I wasn’t “doing more.” I wasn’t drowning, but I wasn’t swimming either. Just floating—and fast approaching the waterfall.

This story isn’t about quitting my job to travel the world or launching a start up that made me rich overnight. It’s about choosing clarity over chaos. And how that choice quietly changed everything.

Step 1: The Mirror Moment

One Saturday morning, I opened Instagram and saw someone I knew launch their “second business.” I hadn’t even brushed my teeth yet. My chest tightened. It wasn’t envy—it was exhaustion.

That’s when I realized: I wasn’t tired from work. I was tired from constantly comparing, overcommitting, and saying yes when I wanted to say no.

So, I made a decision that felt radical in today’s world: I was going to stop chasing and start choosing. My life didn’t need more hustle—it needed more honesty.

Step 2: I Wrote Down Everything That Was Draining Me

Not just work tasks. I mean everything:

That weekly Zoom call I didn’t need to be on

The “catch up soon?” friends I didn’t want to catch up with

The endless tabs open on my laptop and in my mind

The 100 unread emails from newsletters I never signed up for

I made a list of everything that caused tension in my body. Then, I highlighted the ones that were optional.

Guess what? Most of them were.

So, I started unsubscribing—from emails, apps, events, expectations. And every “unsubscribe” gave me a little piece of peace.

Step 3: I Replaced Urgency with Intent

I deleted three words from my vocabulary: “ASAP,” “hustle,” and “should.”

I replaced them with: “on purpose,” “focused,” and “choose.”

I stopped reacting to every ping and started setting phone boundaries.

I made to-do lists with only 3 things per day—and did them better.

I chose a single focus per week: one project, one habit, one goal.

Instead of doing more, I did what mattered. And surprisingly, I got more done, because I wasn’t stretched thin—I was focused deep.

Step 4: I Made Space for Bold Joy

Most people talk about “self-care” like it’s bath bombs and Netflix. For me, bold self-care meant reintroducing joy with intention—the kind I had been deferring for “when things calm down.”

I asked myself: What would make me excited to wake up?

Here’s what made the list:

Painting without a purpose

Taking long walks without my phone

Making playlists that matched my moods

Going to bookstores and not rushing out

Scheduling 1-hour “joy appointments” every week

None of these things made me money. But they made me human again.

Step 5: I Stopped Apologizing for My Boundaries

Saying no felt like betrayal at first—especially to people I loved. But I learned something wild:

When you say no with clarity, real friends say “I get it.”

When you say no to the wrong people, they make space for the right ones.

I created a “non-negotiables” list:

No texts after 9 PM unless urgent

No meetings without agendas

No more guilt for resting

And for every “no” I gave the world, I got a “yes” back from myself.

Step 6: I Redefined Success in My Own Language

What does “bold and eye-catching” really mean?

In a world where everyone’s chasing visibility, I decided success meant being visible to myself.

I asked:

Am I proud of how I show up each day?

Do I know why I’m doing what I’m doing?

Do I feel energized or just busy?

By those standards, I was finally winning.

The Results: A Life That Fits Me

After six months of this experiment, here’s what changed:

I sleep better. I’m not haunted by my to-do list at night.

My relationships improved—because I’m not pretending anymore.

I have time again—because I stopped giving it away.

And best of all? I feel clear. About who I am, what I value, and what’s worth my energy.

No burnout. No dramatic transformation. Just a slow, steady return to myself.

Final Thoughts

We live in a world that rewards noise, speed, and visibility. But sometimes, the most bold thing you can do is quiet the noise. The most eye-catching thing? Living a life that actually feels like yours.

If you’ve been waiting for a sign to slow down—not to stop, but to realign—this is it.

Bold doesn’t have to mean loud. Eye-catching doesn’t have to mean flashy.

Sometimes, it just means: "I see myself again."

And that’s enough.

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