What my windows looked like all week Photo by Scott Webb on Unsplash |
Greetings from waterlogged Florida. Even though Hurricane Debby made landfall well north of us, we’ve had nothing but rain, rain, and smothering humidity all week. Hat tip to Tampa Bay Times Columnist Stephanie Hayes for combining soggy with August to create Soggest…the best word I can think of to describe what it feels like here right now.
But we have better things to do
than complain about the weather, right? Right?!
Right. Here are some fun links to check
out if your August is a Soggest, or if you simply want a break from real life.
The Frugal Girl’s “How to add more fun into your daily life (on a budget, of course)” lists both mindset shifts and practical tips for adding more inexpensive fun to our lives when it feels like all we do is grind. One of my favorites: the “pit stop of fun.” Plenty of these could be free, but last week I picked up a milkshake while I was out running errands and I brightened my day for less than $5.
It will still be summer here until at least October, so I have plenty of time to enjoy these “99 Activities for Celebrating Summer.” I already regularly do some of these activities (enjoy seasonal fruit, grow potted herbs, work jigsaw puzzles), and I want to do a few more (plan a weekend escape to the beach, watch a sunset…preferably at the beach, make ice cream). Which ones would you like to try?
Tired of pursuing happiness? Maybe it’s time to “Give up on happiness. Go hard at wonder.” Monica Parker, author of The Power of Wonder, compares the feeling of wonder to watching a butterfly emerge from a chrysalis. “It is beautiful, complex, and even a little scary. This profound mix of awe, curiosity, and fear, is something that, when achieved, can expand our resilience and deepen our interpretation of the world around us.”
Here’s another article related to increasing positive emotion by accessing awe: “The surprising benefits of ‘awe walks’ for your health and well-being.”
If you were as enchanted as I was by American gymnast Stephen Nedoroscik, the “Clark Kent of gymnastics,” here’s a fun interview with him.
I found “The Haunting Mystery of Artist Laura Perea…” fascinating.
I can’t wait to see Wicked
on the big screen! Here’s the official trailer:
Have a great weekend!
Photo by Kristina Flour on Unsplash |
Recently I’ve come across a concept in the decluttering/home organization world known as “hushing” your house. Author Myquillyn Smith wrote about it in “House Hushing & Why You Need It”:
“To Hush your House, begin with just one room and 24 hours.
“You’re gonna find a place in
another room to act as a temporary, 24[-]hour holding space…. Then you simply
remove all the smalls, gee-gaw[s], tchotchkes and decor and stash it in your
holding area. It’s like a cleanse for your surfaces. A home reset. And
the best part is you experience no decision fatigue because you are not making
decisions. You’re just temporarily moving stuff out.
“Once you hush a room in your house, you can see it with fresh eyes. It’s so easy to become house-blind to all the visual stuff we see daily. With a hushed and quiet room, you get to experience a sense of peace in a matter of minutes.
“I always like to wait 24 hours before I bring anything back in so I can fully experience the room with less. It’s a great feeling and once you live in your hushed, quieted room for a day, you’ll start to feel how wonderful it is and you’ll want to protect that feeling.”
I’m intrigued by this idea for decluttering, but I’m also thinking about what it would be like to “hush” my life in general. In other words, could I remove everything from an area of my life for a set period of time, and then thoughtfully add back in what was truly necessary and desirable? In the rush of life, how much of what I do is truly necessary, and how much could I let go of to make room for more peace and happiness?
Since hushing is temporary, I could:
- Stop reading or listening to the news
- Stay off social media
- Choose to buy nothing
- Stop watching TV
- Stay home instead of go out
- Close my computer and stay off the internet
- Skip running errands
Twenty-four hours might not be enough time for hushing my
life—I might want to do it for 48 hours, or even longer. However, this isn’t an
exercise in deprivation. It’s an experiment to see if removing some things
results in a more peaceful, happier life. It’s a way to see if something is
bringing me joy, or bringing me down. It’s a way to get a little distance and
perspective on things I might normally do on auto pilot.
I think I’m going to try hushing some things in August. How about you? Is there anything in your life you’d like to hush?
Image by Monika from Pixabay |
Today’s post is a poem written by Marilyn Kallet of Tennessee, courtesy of American Life in Poetry. I was looking for something with a summer feel, and this fit the bill.
Fireflies
In the dry summer field at nightfall,
fireflies rise like sparks.
Imagine the presence of ghosts
flickering, the ghosts of young friends,
your father nearest in the distance.
This time they carry no sorrow,
no remorse, their presence is so light.
Childhood comes to you,
memories of your street in lamplight,
holding those last moments before bed,
capturing lightning-bugs,
with a blossom of the hand
letting them go. Lightness returns,
an airy motion over the ground
you remember from Ring Around the Rosie.
If you stay, the fireflies become fireflies
again, not part of your stories,
as unaware of you as sleep, being
beautiful and quiet all around you.
Most recent completed puzzle |
I just finished another jigsaw puzzle. It took me a couple of weeks of relaxed attention, and while there were moments when I had to work a little harder to proceed, finishing it was easy. I never had to schedule time or give myself a pep talk. I naturally gravitated to it, and spent time working on it most days, enough that I was able to finish it relatively quickly.
If I have time to do a jigsaw puzzle, why don’t I “have
time” to do other things I say I want to do, like return to sketching/art
journaling or watching the dog training videos of my course so I can work with
Luna?
Why are some things so easy to do while I struggle with
others? Clearly, time is not the issue. How “hard” something feels is—how much
mental energy I have to summon to Do the Thing.
During this year of building a life I want, I’m going to
explore a few of what I’m calling “building blocks.” In this post, I’m going to
talk about “making it easier.”
When we try something new or we want to establish a new habit, we need to make it as easy as possible. Don’t set up roadblocks for ourselves when we could make our way clear. We don’t put obstacles in the way of babies learning to walk, do we? Maybe we should treat ourselves like babies!
As Gretchen Rubin says in “The 21 Strategies for Habit Formation”: “To a truly remarkable extent, we’re more likely to do something if it’s convenient, and less likely if it’s not. The amount of effort, time, or decision-making required by an action has a huge influence on our habits. Make it easy to do right and hard to go wrong.”
My puzzle was easy to do not just because it was fun, but
because it was visible and readily available each time I had a few spare
moments to do it. I didn’t have to find it, or unpack it, or anything like
that.
I started thinking about different ways I can make it easier to spend time doing the things I want to do, without falling into the default of flopping on the couch or scrolling on my phone. My goal is to, as Leo Babauta writes, “Make it so easy you can’t say no.”
Here are a few ideas for making it easier I’m experimenting
with:
Create a kit. A kit is a collection of items you need
to accomplish a certain task. One kit I use all the time is a tote to carry the
tools I need to groom Tank. It contains a hoof pick, curry comb, brushes, and
other basic items I’m likely to need every time I groom him. I’m going to make
an art journaling kit with some of my art supplies so that I’m not faced with
the entirety of my (unorganized) stash every time I feel like playing in my
journal. That’s just too overwhelming. Sitting down with a limited number of
curated supplies is a lot easier.
Stack the habit. Just as I get dressed after I take a
shower, I can piggyback a new activity on top of an established one: “After I
do X, I do Y.” An idea here could be, “After I eat lunch, I watch a dog
training course video.” I usually check email after lunch, but I could easily
slip the dog training video in between eating and email. The videos are short,
and won’t take much time away from the activities I have planned in the
afternoon.
Use a timer. If there’s something I want to do but I’m feeling resistant to, setting a timer for a short amount of time often gets me through that roadblock: 15 minutes of decluttering and I can stop; do my weight training routine for 30 minutes and I’m done. There’s something about knowing we have a finite, and often short, period of time to do an activity that makes it easier to get started. And getting started is often the hardest part.
Pair with pleasure. If there’s something I don’t want
to do, or I find hard to do, I pair it with a simple pleasure. A delicious cup
of something to drink, music or an inspiring podcast, sitting by a sunny window.
Sometimes that little bit of pleasure is enough to convince me to start.
These are just a few ways to make establishing a new habit
or adding a new activity to your schedule easier, and making it easier is just
the first of my building blocks for building a satisfying life. More to come!
What’s your favorite way to make it easier? If you have more
strategies, I’d love to hear about them in the comments
below, or email me at kathyjohn335[at]gmail[dot]com.