You know when you get in your car and drive to work and you cant even remember the journey? That is Autopilot.
Walking we do on autopilot – imagine the effort if we had to think about each movement needed to take a single step! If you really give thought to it you can imagine we wouldn’t get very far.
Once we have mastered walking as a child, for the majority of us fortunate enough to retain good health, we never really have to give it much thought again.
Autopilot is when our body and mind shift into the familiarity of something they have done a thousand times before. So we dont really have to ‘think’ about what we are doing – it’s an incredible skill and one that the majority of time helps us get along in our incredibly full lives, especially in the busy world we now live in.
Driving is more often than not done on auto pilot. Once we have mastered it we give little thought to the mechanics behind it. Do you remember learning to drive? How difficult it was to change gears and press the pedals and watch what was happening all around you all at the same time? Without autopilot we would likely never drive, the stress would be too much!
So clearly, Autopilot has its advantages, but for a moment I want you to think of all the other things you do on Autopilot. There are things that I have done so often that I sometimes do them and cant remember doing them - brushing my teeth, having a shower, getting dressed – added to these menial tasks come newer trappings – how long do you spend flicking through Facebook and have no idea what you have even read or for how long you have been doing it? What about eating? How often do we eat lunch at our desks whilst looking at our computer screens, or catch a bite to eat whilst running for the bus, or eat our dinner in front of the TV?
Can you even remember what you had for lunch yesterday or what your dinner tasted like last night?
As I have said Autopilot has its uses. It can be awesome when a flash of inspiration hits whilst your mind is elsewhere. For example, whether in the shower or when you are auto piloting on the drive to work, there is nothing like a bit of mind wandering or day dreaming to really come up with those ‘out there’ goals that might just change your life….but…and it’s a big BUT…studies have shown that we spend nearly half our lives on autopilot….I’ll say that again
WE ARE LIVING NEARLY 50% OF OUR LIVES IN AUTOPILOT!
Let’s do some math….given that the average UK life expectancy is around 80, we spend roughly one third of our lives sleeping, leaving about 50 years left to live. Not saying it doesn’t count but the first ten years of life are spent mastering our basic skills and learning to read, write and interact (and if we are honest many of us can’t remember those years in very much detail). Then its school and college taking off about four years (averaging 8 hrs a day), working from 19 to say 65 at eight hours a day (excluding weekends and bank holidays) we can take off another 10 solid years of life spent in work.
We spend on average a massive four to six years CLEANING (depending on how much you do of course).
So now we are down to around 20 years of really ‘living’.
I won’t go into the more detailed breakdown of how long we spend on the toilet or how long we spend in the shower or brushing our teeth. BUT SERIOUSLY 20 YEARS!
Now if you take off the circa 50% of auto pilot living that most of us do then we are looking at like 10 years!!
Only TEN FRIGGIN YEARS of actual living!
IT’S NOT ENOUGH!! Well it doesn’t feel enough for me so I want to make sure that I am experiencing each moment as best I can. This means consciously choosing when to be on autopilot and when to pay attention to my life!
How often do you speed through a day on autopilot? What activities are you doing without paying attention? Try and be aware of when you are on autopilot and make a decision about how you are going to live those precious moments of your life.