Clear your RAM


Defines the switch from cluttered mind to peaceful mind

We’ve all been there. It’s 11:00 PM. The day was a success – mostly – but your head is still spinning. You’re dictating reminders into your phone. You’re replaying meeting snippets in your mind, trying to unpack what was actually said. To top it off, you just found the dog destroyed your favorite sweatshirt, and the evidence is all over the floor.

You’re exhausted, but you’re too wired to sleep. Your mental RAM is at 100%, and your “processor” is overheating.

Mental clutter – tasks, worries, and that nagging sense you’ve forgotten something – slows your thinking and drains your motivation. High performance and a peaceful mind both require a clean slate.

In a world where leaders are currently facing high levels of burnout and cognitive load, a structured “Worry-to-Action Pipeline” is exactly the kind of pragmatic, tested tool you have come to expect from this blog!

Here is a no-nonsense, 4-step process to move your worries from your head onto paper, and turn that noise into a concrete to-do list.

Dump every thought, fear, and reminder spinning in your head on paper. Write them down. Don’t filter, don’t judge, and definitely don’t try to solve them yet. Just write or type until the “RAM” is empty and no more thoughts come.

If your head is spinning too fast to type, use your phone to dictate a voice note. Once it’s out of your system, move those notes to a larger screen – like your laptop or tablet – where you can actually see the “mess” you’ve collected in your mind.

Don’t just look at the mess -sort it. Grab three highlighters (or use the highlight tool on your screen) and assign every item to one of these three buckets:

  • Actionable Now (Green): Things you can act on in the next 24 hours. No excuses—just tasks you can do today or tomorrow (e.g., “Email the client”).
  • Influence (Yellow): Things you can’t fix alone but can nudge. This requires a conversation with a colleague, a friend, or an expert. (e.g., Improving team morale when a manager is difficult to approach).
  • The Noise (Red): Things you cannot change. This includes the past, yesterday’s mistakes, or other people’s opinions. (e.g., The dog eating your clothes while you were out).

Examples:

The “Actionable Now” items are the easiest to solve, yet they often cause the most background noise.

  • The 48-Hour Rule: If it’s Green, give it a specific time slot in your calendar within the next two days. If you don’t schedule it, it stays in your head.
  • The “Parking Lot”: If it truly isn’t urgent and can wait longer than two weeks, move it out of your daily view. Put a reminder in your calendar for a future date and delete it from your current list.

For the items left on your list – the Yellow and the Red – you only need one simple decision each.

For your Yellow items (things you can influence but not fix alone): identify the one person you need to involve and write their name next to the item. That’s your action. You’re not solving it tonight – you’re simply deciding who carries it forward with you. One name. Done.

For your red items – choose a small ritual of release. Red items are RAM-drainers – things you cannot change, control, or solve tonight. But simply crossing them out rarely works. Your brain needs a small, deliberate act to believe it has actually let go.

Choose a ritual that suits you:

Tear it up. Transfer all your red items onto a separate page. Then tear that page – slowly and deliberately – into small pieces. The physical act of destruction signals to your brain that processing time on these is officially closed.

Box it. Not ready to destroy them? Fold the page and place it in a dedicated box – a shoebox, a tin, anything with a lid. This isn’t surrender; it’s containment. Tell yourself: if this still matters in two weeks, it will still be in the box. Most of the time, when you check, it won’t.

Either way, once the red items are off your main list and out of your hands – torn up or lidded away – your brain has its permission to stop processing them tonight.

Close the list. You’re done for tonight.

Tonight, you don’t need to solve everything. You just need to stop carrying it all at once. A pen, a page, and twenty minutes is enough to move from spinning to settled – and to wake up tomorrow with a clearer head and a shorter list. Your brain will thank you for it.

Emergency Preparedness Is Not Optional Anymore


I started writing this in September 2025. I should have published it then. The growing frequency of extreme weather has only made the message more urgent.

Last year’s storm season left many homes without power, water, or communication for days at a time. Roads were blocked, services were stretched thin, and some communities found themselves scrambling to cope.

The reality is that most of us weren’t prepared for how long recovery efforts would take. And with weather patterns becoming more unpredictable, this season is shaping up to be no different. A little preparation now can mean the difference between anxiety and confidence when the winds pick up or the rain won’t stop.

Why This Matters Right Now

While forecasting systems are valuable, the impact, timing, and severity of storms can outpace warnings. Even the best warning systems miss sudden changes. We’ve seen flooding in areas that weren’t historically flood-prone, power outages lasting longer than anyone expected, and communities cut off because access roads were too dangerous to travel.

And sometimes, there’s no warning at all. Heavy rainfall on already saturated ground can trigger flooding overnight. Strong winds can knock out power lines or damage infrastructure in minutes. These realities make storm readiness a skill every household should take seriously.

Why Storms Feel Harder to Predict

  1. Climate Change: More intense storms and unpredictable weather patterns mean traditional “storm seasons” are harder to define. Some events may not be predicted, and we have seen that warnings do not always go out on time. You need to be watchful. Check a reliable weather app and be aware of the state that soil in your area may be in – dry (very dry)? Perhaps that creates a harder surface for water to soak into and could lead to fast surface water movement.
  2. Infrastructure Limitations: Utility teams work hard, but restoration takes time, especially in rural areas or after widespread damage. Recovery may take longer than expected, delaying your return to normal life.
  3. Geography: Know your environment – tree cover, low-lying areas, and road access all play a role. Consider that you may need to get your household to higher ground depending on the weather event you are preparing for.
  4. Hidden Hazards: Recent rainfall or ground saturation means flooding risk isn’t always obvious.

The Cost of Being Unprepared

When a storm hits, it’s not just about losing power for a few hours. It’s about making sure your family has safe drinking water, warmth, food, and a way to communicate. Being unprepared adds stress in an already difficult time, while being ready brings peace of mind and even positions you to help neighbours.

Editable 72-Hour Checklist (Downloadable & Editable)

I’ve created a practical checklist based on lessons learned from last year’s storms — and from my own experience of seeing how quickly things can spiral. Once downloaded, this tool is:

  • Editable: Add or remove items specific to your family, pets, or home.
  • Comprehensive: Goes beyond food and water to include communication, travel readiness, and planning with housemates or renters.
  • Free: Download it, print it, and make it your own.

How to Build a Kit That Works for You

Be Ready for the Unexpected

Preparedness isn’t just about “storm season.” Sudden heavy rainfalls, extended winds, or flash floods can happen with little or no warning. Watch the weather, stay aware of ground conditions, and take action early.

Small steps today mean you’ll face whatever storms come next with confidence. Instead of scrambling, you’ll know exactly where your supplies are, how to reach loved ones, and how to ride out a few days off the grid safely.