Mindful endings
Ending things with care.
Leaving behind something that worked in order to pursue something new takes courage. We should celebrate more people who do it. It’s not even quitting. It’s called being done with something. And that’s a good thing.
I enjoyed rereading Manuel’s thoughts on quitting. I agree that we should celebrate “being done”. It’s not easy to end things when time is universally recognized as a symbol of expertise, quality, and value. But there’s a difference between giving up versus consciously ending something once it’s served its purpose. Knowing the difference is the difficult part; I like to think that your guy always knows.
I also wish we cared more about ending things with care—ending projects, jobs, relationships with as much intention and integrity as the start. It’s the best way to honour the time and effort that went into them. We could save ourselves so much later regret.
It also doesn’t have to be a grand gesture. Some effortless and less effortless ways to end things with care:
- Simply reflect on (but like really reflect) why the thing needs to end and be able to articulate it.
- See through important projects before leaving a job.
- Put together a handover doc.
- Send an appreciation email to coworkers.
- Send a genuine parting message to the person you’re parting ways with.
- Have an egoless and calm discussion to end a relationship.
- Write a reflection piece.
- A conscious uncoupling ceremony.
I really like the idea of mindful endings as a practice, maybe because I’m in the middle of an end-it-or-not decision process. It’s a practice that complements all the quick-start, startup, swipe-left culture out there.