Look around you right now. Whatever space you're in - your desk, your inbox, your mind - there's likely some degree of disorder creeping in at the edges. A drawer that needs sorting. Emails that piled up. A relationship that's felt a little distant. A habit that slowly dissolved. This isn't a personal failure. It's physics.
The second law of thermodynamics tells us that systems naturally move toward disorder. Entropy - the tendency of things to fall apart, disperse, and unravel - is not a glitch. It's the default state of the universe. Left to itself, a garden becomes overgrown, a relationship becomes strained, a goal becomes a memory.
Order is not a destination you arrive at. It is a direction you keep choosing.
This truth, once you really absorb it, is both humbling and deeply freeing. Things don't deteriorate because you failed. They deteriorate because that's what things do. The remarkable achievement - the one that actually requires something of us - is building and sustaining order against that current.
Your life is no different
In my work with stressed professionals, one of the most common sources of quiet suffering I see is the belief that things should stay good on their own. That once they get the promotion, repair the relationship, or find the right routine, it should hold. When it doesn't - when the stress creeps back, the connection fades, the discipline slips - people conclude there's something wrong with them.
But what they're experiencing isn't dysfunction. It's entropy. It's the natural order doing what it does.
Your mental health is a system. Your relationships are systems. Your career, your focus, your sense of meaning - all systems. And systems require ongoing input to maintain themselves. They require attention, maintenance, and intentional effort not because you broke them, but because that's simply what it costs to keep anything alive and growing.
The effort is the point
Here's the reframe that changes everything: the maintenance isn't a tax on a life that should otherwise be easy. The maintenance is the life. The tending is the thing.
A reflection…
Think of a relationship you treasure. It didn't stay warm because no one touched it. It stayed warm because someone - you, them, both of you - kept putting energy in. A text. A conversation. A repair after conflict. Small, consistent acts of care. That's not overhead. That's love, doing its actual work.
The same applies to your emotional wellbeing. Therapy, journaling, honest conversations with yourself, moments of stillness - these aren't luxuries or signs that something is wrong. They are what it looks like to actively tend to a human mind. To choose order over entropy, not once, but regularly.
What this means for leveling up
Many people I work with want to improve - to grow in their careers, in their relationships, in their sense of self. And they absolutely can. But they often expect growth to happen on top of a stable base without accounting for the fact that the base requires work, too.
If you want to level anything up, you first have to be in relationship with where it currently is. That means looking honestly at what's drifting. Acknowledging the entropy that's accumulated - in your stress responses, in your communication patterns, in the story you tell yourself about who you are. Not with self-criticism, but with curiosity and willingness.
Growth is not a leap from disorder to order. It's the ongoing practice of choosing order - one small, deliberate act at a time.
The question isn't whether entropy will show up. It will. The question is whether you'll notice it, and what you'll do when you do.
Start where you are
You don't need a dramatic overhaul. You need to get honest about where things have been left untended, and to start - gently, without judgment - putting some energy back in. One conversation. One boundary. One session. One honest look at what's been drifting.
The natural order of things is chaos. And the most human thing you can do is keep choosing, deliberately and imperfectly, to create something different.
That's not weakness. That's the whole work.
