“The secret of getting ahead is getting started. The secret
of getting started is breaking your complex overwhelming tasks into small
manageable tasks, and then starting on the first one.”
Earlier this week, I made lunch plans with a friend while we
were both out doing errands. We had tentatively set a time to meet, but in the
course of her errands, my friend let me know she would be about 30 minutes
later than we planned. I found myself with a decision: what to do with 30
minutes of unscheduled time?
I could have done one more errand before meeting her, but
that would have added to my overall stress level and possibly made me late for
our lunch date. I had books with me after a trip to the library and a small
travel sketch kit in my purse. Dare I—gasp!—simply take that 30 minutes for
myself?
You bet.
I snagged a table and a cup of coffee at Panera and lost
myself in a new book. I made a conscious choice to slow down instead of speed
up, to do something relaxing and fun instead of packing my day fuller.
Too often, I don’t make that choice. Instead, I
overschedule, or let guilt feelings keep me from taking all but the tiniest
scraps of time for myself. I seem to believe if I’m not doing something
productive (for pay, for someone else, etc.) I’m wasting time. Possibly because
I feel I’m being lazy if I’m not constantly doing.
However, I’m learning, slowly, that when it comes to getting
things done, more is not necessarily better. Not if it comes at the cost of
health or well-being. And no matter how hard I go at that to-do list, it’s
always going to keep getting longer—I will never, never, have everything checked off, so what’s the point of killing
myself to accomplish more, more, more?
I found my little reading break, not to mention a delightful
lunch with my friend, to be so refreshing that the rest of my day seemed
easier—and certainly happier.
Particularly during this time of year, we can find ourselves
stretched too thin, adding item after item to our growing to-do lists. I
encourage you to do one thing less today
than you had planned. Take that time to something you find relaxing, inspiring or energizing.
What will you not do
today? What will you do instead?
A Kansas poet,
Wyatt Townley has written a number of fine poems about the swift and relentless
passage of time, one of the great themes of the world’s poetry, and I
especially like this one. [Introduction by Ted Kooser.]
I hope last week was as lovely for you as it was for me. I took
last week “off” as much as I could, just keeping up the bare minimum of
household activity to keep the family functioning. I indulged in an orgy of
reading every chance I got and reveled in the cool weather we’ve been having.
Fires in the fireplace and open windows and no sweating!
We celebrated a quiet Thanksgiving with my father-in-law
Thursday. And though we usually wait till the first week of December to
decorate for the holidays, we decided to take advantage of an extra set of
hands (two sets, actually, as my mother-in-law joined us Saturday) to put the
Christmas tree up. We broke out the eggnog, put the Florida/Florida State
college football game on TV and went to town.
I’d say that was a pretty good start to the holiday season.
“What we're really talking about is a wonderful day set
aside on the fourth Thursday of November when no one diets. I mean, why
else would they call it Thanksgiving?”
—Erma Bombeck
May your Thanksgiving be filled with happiness and all the
treats that spell “holiday” for you.