A Year of Habits, no. 48



Well, the week is over and I suppose there’s not much to say about it after Thursday night’s dump.  If I had to sum up my feelings in one word I’d choose “relief.”   With another child sick today we have just one family member left who apparently has an iron stomach.  At this point I’d say he has a good chance of missing it entirely, which would be nice.  I’d love to be finished with this virus.

The baby shower came and went and I feel so relieved that we pulled it off.  The best part of the entire thing was doing it with my sister, who I got to spend several hours with.  She is so much fun to be around and does a good job of everything.  The shower was for our sister-in-law and it was fun.  Somehow I managed to get some Christmas decorating taken care of on Friday so the house looked festive and clean when people arrived.   The food worked out and even tasted good, and when it was all over I could hardly believe that it went so smoothly.  I feel so grateful.

I also managed to get the bulk food order divided and sorted and almost everyone has come to pick up their order.  It will be nice to be finished with it as well.   All week long I was so worried about getting through the baby shower and distributing this order.   When both responsibilities had been taken care of  my brain was stuck, unable to remember what I should be doing next.  I knew I had a long list of things to be working on for Christmas but I wasn’t processing any of it.   My head has cleared today as the day progressed and I’m back to my usual state of having a to-do list for tomorrow that is much longer than the day will hold.  Cleaning, laundry, and we still have lots of homework to make up. {I’m a little worried about the homework part. Deep breath.}

Tonight as a family we watched a Christmas message that was very uplifting and which helped set the tone in my heart for the coming week.  However it works out, whatever I do or don’t get done, I hope I can keep this feeling with me and really enjoy the Christmas season.  I am so grateful for the Christmas season and want my children to feel both reverence and excitement.  We’ll see how that blends with make-up work.

Life is good.  I am so fortunate.
Have a great week!

Jennifer

A Year of Habits, no. 47



Only five weeks left in the year, and I am most definitely not the person I wanted to be at the end of the year.  Have I improved?  Yes.  Have I arrived?  No.

We had a wonderful Thanksgiving holiday surrounded by family we love, and I enjoyed my time in the kitchen preparing the meal and baking pies.  The pause Thanksgiving brings is now behind us and it’s full speed ahead for the duration of  the year.   I feel excited for the Christmas season; looking forward to decorating, a little worried about getting everything done, hoping I can find time for some things that only I care about, praying that somehow my children can set aside the petty things and let their better natures rise to the occasion.

I was up all night last night with a sick child so today my perspective on the week is tainted by a weary ache behind my eyes and the feeling that I’m looking around, holding my breath while we wait for the next one to succumb to a virus.  I have so much to do this week:  do I pray they all get sick tomorrow or hold on to the hope that some of us will escape?  It’s been a few days of quiet, which I appreciated, but at the moment I feel completely unprepared to hit the ground running with a new school week tomorrow.  I’m sure there’s some unfinished homework in at least one backpack and I don’t even want to see what’s on the calendar.  And I wonder, why is it that after brief breaks like this I dread getting back to real life so passionately?  I know others who love it and wish I knew why it makes me sick to my stomach.

Last night my husband and I were honored to attend a birthday dinner for a friend.  I’ve found myself reflecting on it today.  There are so many things we worry about and spend our time and resources on, but people are what matter; relationships are what count.   I want to do a better job of remembering that all the time.

I continue to work at getting and keeping the house cleaner.  I continue to try to finish things when I start them and to avoid starting things I really don’t have time for.  I’m trying to be a better mother, to respond calmly to my children no matter how upset they are, to be more patient with the newterrain that seems to come with teenaged children – a landscape full of unexpected emotional land mines and sprinkled with times of real humor and enjoyment.  I am trying to be of greater service to others, trying to spend my time doing what matters most.  I think I’m slowly improving but I make a lot of mistakes and am continually humbled by how hard I can try and still fall short.

I am grateful for my blessings, humbled by my responsibilities.  I rejoice in knowing there is a God who cares about us all, who knows me personally and on whom I can lean when I am tired and in whom I can trust when I am worried.  I am so thankful for the gifts of love he leaves all around me, this week in the form of stunning sunrises especially.  We even had a day of total sunshine this week!

Life is good.  I am so blessed.  I hope your week is amazing!
Jennifer

A Year of Habits, no. 46



It’s been an interesting week, full of activity.  This was a week for immunizations, appointments, trips to the post office.  Lots of little things that are necessary but which can also be frustrating.  I also taught a friend how to bake bread, put together a bulk food order and took care of the purchasing, packing and delivery of the food.  We threw a birthday in the mix as well, along with birthday shopping.

Yesterday while my husband and son were in the mountains for the opening day of snowboarding I took seven children to the mall so two of my daughters could spend their birthday money on a pair of Toms and have them custom painted at a Nordstrom’s event.  And for the record, I don’t especially recommend taking seven young children to the mall, especially when you need to hang out in one spot while people paint shoes.  I have no idea how many times my little ones went up and down the escalators, but it was a lot.  We finished off with a trip to Krispy Kreme with report cards in hand for free donuts.  It was a fun outing, but it was also exhausting.  I find that being in crowded places while keeping track of my children is overstimulating for me and I always come home drained.

Sometimes I wonder how Saturdays are supposed to work.  You’re supposed to use them to take care of all the work that doesn’t get done during the week plus any family work projects, run errands, do something fun, provide opportunities for your kids, participate in sporting activities.  Because I believe in the law of the Sabbath, Saturday also needs to be used to prepare for Sunday which also means preparing for Monday.  We do homework, make sure clothes are taken care of for the next week, and make sure lunches will be ready as well.  So why is it, when I need to do three days worth of work on Saturday, that I expect it to be an easier day?

I find that weeks like this, when every day holds unusual activities, take a real toll on how our family functions because it profoundly affects my productivity.  There is less time for cooking, cleaning, laundry, etc.  The house gets cluttered which also means people start losing things.  I have multiple time-sensitive things I’d love to blog about but no time to even log in.  Although I know they are necessary sometimes, I really dislike weeks that throw us off.

Coinciding with the busy schedule came an unexpected factor:  my heart.  For some reason I wasn’t entirely myself this week.  I’ve had this trembling inside, this feeling of worry gnawing at me regarding my real work as a mother.  I could tell myself that I’m doing great because I took care of the shots, the birthday shopping, the errands and so forth, but instead I’ve been filled with an awareness of the enormity of what I really need to accomplish as a mother, and it has me shaking in my shoes.   It’s more than feeding them every day, clothing them, keeping track of homework and doctors appointments and playdates (although to a degree those things alone make me shake sometimes).  It’s about what they’re becoming, about spending enough time connecting with them to really know what’s going on inside, about purposefully planning so that they will grow emotionally and spiritually in healthy ways.  It’s about finding enough time to talk about the things that matter, time to teach them, time, time, time.  And so often life gets in the way of life.  The homework, important as it is, sometimes prevents us from doing what really matters, and sometimes it makes me tremble inside.  Such was my week.  I cannot count the times I blinked back the tears stinging at my eyes and thought of the words, “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you.  Not as the world giveth, give I unto.  Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.”  I will do my best, but sometimes it makes me weep to realize how far from good enough my best really is.

What I really need is a couple of days of quiet to read, plan, pray, regroup.  I keep thinking that if I could do this I would feel more centered and better able to face each day, but every time I sit down in a quiet room someone follows me in with a need or a problem and I have to make do with about 45 seconds of quiet instead.  I can get by on that sometimes, but this week it felt entirely insufficient.  (Once again, back to my daydream:  one week alone in my house.)

I missed the sun this week.  Several times around 11:00 a.m. I asked myself, “What is wrong with me?  Why do I feel like this?” and then realized it still seemed like 4 a.m. in the house because it was so gray outside.  I’m praying we get some sun this winter because I really don’t know how to prepare myself for 5 months of gray.

I hope this post doesn’t sound like I’m complaining.  I’m not.  It’s my life and I chose this.  It simply turned out that my schedule and my heart had some badly timed irregularities this week which made things complicated.  I can say this:  prayer helps, and things always work out.

So in the habits department I guess I feel like I’m holding a lot of loose ends that need attention.  I need to whip the house into shape,  get back on top of everyone’s grades and assignments, plan Thanksgiving, wrap up projects and clean my studio.  Mostly, though, I need to pause.  I need to find a way to slow down, pause, and get my heart right.  And finish reading all the assigned take home books with all the children earlier so we have time to cuddle on the couch with some real literature.  That kind of thing.  It will be wonderful to have them all home for a few days over Thanksgiving.  Perhaps I’ll be able to pull it together this week.

I am grateful for what I’m learning.  I am grateful to have been trusted with such a great work.  I am grateful for my life, for my children, for my challenges and even for my personal weaknesses which are humbling me so deeply and opening my eyes to all I need to learn.  And I’m grateful for a husband who’s in the ring with me.  I couldn’t do it without him.

Life is good.  Happy Thanksgiving week, everyone.
Jennifer

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