Honestly, I used to be that person always pointing fingers when things went sideways. Traffic made me late? Not my fault. Project deadline slipped? Teammates dropped the ball. Then I read somewhere that owning your crap is step zero for adulting, so I decided to run a 7-day responsibility challenge. Here’s exactly what went down:
Day 1: Calling myself out
Started by writing down every blame-shifting thought in my notes app. Like when I burnt breakfast, caught myself muttering about the stupid stove. Wrote: “Chose to scroll Instagram instead of watching the damn toast.” Felt stupid seeing it on screen.
Day 3: Fixing my flubs
Made a “cleanup list” for recent messes:
- Forgot mom’s birthday → Called her crying instead of blaming work chaos
- Missed gym 3 weeks → Cancelled membership instead of complaining about commute
- Credit card interest ballooned → Set auto-pay instead of ranting about “system”
Each fix stung like pulling duct tape off hairy arms.
Day 5: Owning emotional potholes
Snapped at my partner over dirty dishes. Old me would’ve doubled down. Instead: “I’m frustrated because I didn’t ask for help when overwhelmed.” Actual magic happened – we invented this dumb “dish dance” chore routine.
The wake-up call
By day 7, noticed three big shifts:
1) My apologies got shorter (“I screwed up” vs 5-minute excuses)
2) People stopped avoiding tough convos with me
3) Less time spent drafting defensive texts at 2am
Still mess up constantly though. Like yesterday I blamed the dog for eating my assignment draft. Truth? Left it on the floor while binge-watching K-dramas. Baby steps.