A Year of Habits, no. 14



It’s been a week in the trenches.  Sorely behind on laundry, discouraged by clutter and  distracted by some emotionally charged issues we’ve been dealing with, the week ran away with me.   A couple of busy days killed all creative thought and then my little break from blogging became a sincere effort to see if sacrificing the time I spend on it would translate to more productivity, a cleaner house, better organization or at least a more focused mother.

Interestingly, nothing really improved.  It turns out that all work and no play made Jane a very dull girl.  I have a tendency to throw myself into cleaning, working through the entire day without food or breaks of any kind, intent on getting everything done.  Then I pick everyone up from school and watch it unravel.  If I do too much of this I sometimes become resentful.  I place too much value on the cleaning, allowing my own success and worth to depend on it, leaving myself in a position where it’s me against reality.  It’s not a good thing.  On the other hand, if I allow myself to spend 20 minutes doing something I enjoy, I’m able to disconnect from the “perfect house = I’m ok/messy house = I’m a failure” mentality and embrace the reasoning that “I worked hard today and made good progress; I’ll work hard again tomorrow and in the end it will all turn out.”  In addition to this we had a lot of gray days.  I realized that creativity is my self-made sunshine and if it won’t shine outside I mustn’t neglect it inside.

As the week wore on I noticed that my productivity and focus were being negatively affected by some things I’m worried about.  I tend to stew about things, and we’ve had so many mini emergencies as parents in the past six weeks that I feel like I’ve got emotional ADD.  I had a hard time focusing on what was in front of me and instead carried unnecessary worries.  I’ve always known that I’m a serious person which is sometimes a virtue and often a fault.

I had two interesting experiences this week.  On Monday I felt so stressed about things I can’t control that I felt like I was being squeezed physically.  I knelt down and prayed, expressing a desire to cast my burdens at the feet of the Lord.  I asked Him to carry the stress, knowing that the work was still mine to do.  I was willing to work, but couldn’t work properly with the weight I was carrying in my heart.  I got up and went back to work, still worried.  I’d been looking for a babysitter for my three youngest children in order to attend the temple with a friend on Tuesday.  Suddenly I knew who to call.  I made the call, arranged everything and emailed my friend.  The instant it was done my stress evaporated.  My problems didn’t change, but the worry was lifted.  My prayer was answered.  For the rest of the day I lived the reality of Christ’s promise that “my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”

The second experience involved a phone call from a friend.  We were giving one another mini reports on the challenges we’ve faced recently as mothers and I shared my observation that I’m stewing too much over things.  She then passed along something her Dad once told her.  He said that his observation had been that the people who are most successful are those who become good at changing gears.  I realized I’ve been stuck in high gear emotionally and it was wearing me down.

Little did I know that within minutes of talking to her another problem would surface involving one of my children.  The 24 hours immediately following required me to make a couple of difficult decisions and have some hard conversations.  Her counsel about changing gears was the answer.  When school was dismissed on Friday our spring break began.  Within a few hours we had family arrive in town for the weekend.  Nothing more can be done about the problem until school resumes.  Once more I prayed for help with surrendering the stress as well as focusing on what was in front of me.

I was able to change gears and we had a wonderful weekend.  My parents were here, along with my sister and her husband, my brother and his boys, and another brother and his family were in town as well.  On Friday night we rented the movie Ramona & Beezus.  We’d wanted to see it for months but hadn’t found time to watch it.  The children enjoyed it, but I laughed harder than I’ve laughed in a long, long time.  It was therapeutic.  It wasn’t until I was laughing uncontrollably that I realized how wound up I’d been.  The emotional release was so healthy.

Saturday morning 19 of us went to the BYU Art Museum to see the Karl Bloch exhibit.   I could have stayed for hours, just sitting in front of several paintings.  My appreciation for Jesus Christ has grown in recent weeks, leaving many tender places in my heart.  The exhibit was food for my soul and I am anxious to return again before the exhibit closes in early May.

Saturday night we took my parents and our two oldest daughters to the BYU Ballroom Dance performance.  My husband and I go together every year and I was particularly happy to have my parents come.  It did not disappoint.  The colors, music, lights, costumes, choreography and execution were inspiring.   Some of the performances moved me to tears; others made me want to dance along with them.  ALL of them made me yearn for excellence in my personal life.  As I watched the dancers I found myself making observations about life, movement, precision and balance.    It happens to me every year.  Heavenly Father always teaches me beautiful things during the show.

We’ve had late nights talking with loved ones, children thundering through the house with cousins, good-byes said.  Today we had a wonderful visit with my brother, his wife and baby, and another brother who came for lunch.  We went on a walk to see the lambs in a nearby pasture.  We played a game of keep away with a bean bag in the back yard.  We talked about both trivial and weighty matters.  We were together.

Tonight I am grateful for many things.  I’m grateful for my baby girl who had a minor but very painful health challenge this week.  I’m grateful for an unforgettable evening with my six year old daughter spent reading her new favorite (and my old favorite) book, Miss Rumphius.  I’m grateful for my supportive husband.  I’m grateful for my parents who listen to everything that goes on in my life.  I’m grateful for ancestors, particularly those who have gone just a few generations before me.  This weekend I got to hold in my hands and read a letter written to my Grandfather by his brother in the early 1930’s.  The brotherly love that was expressed touched my heart.  I’m grateful for people I’ve never met whose commitment to excellence bless my life.  I’m grateful for art.  I’m grateful for music.  I’m grateful for my brothers and sisters and their families; all of them make me want to be better.

Most of all, I’m grateful for my Savior.  I’m grateful for answered prayers.  And I’m grateful beyond words for two dear friends through whom the Lord met my needs.  The first, who took me to the temple, and the second who shared timely wisdom with me.  If I hadn’t recognized the need to change gears I might have missed all the emotional benefits of our weekend activities.

I’m headed into our week determined to downshift.   I’m also going to live a balanced week.  We’ll keep things neat and tidy, but I’m going to give myself a break along with the children.   I’m going to work on some personal goals.  And yes, I’m going to keep blogging.  We’re praying for some sun (so far it’s been more like Christmas break with all the snow) but if it doesn’t shine we’ll make our own.

Have a great week!

Jennifer

A Year of Habits, no. 13



I have such mixed feelings tonight.  Soccer season is now in full swing at our house, increasing time in the car and at parks all over the place and restricting time at home to keep things running.  I feel a sense of disappointment in myself for not having the house fully under control by now, but nothing can be done about it except to keep trying.

March was a rugged month.   I’ve had all ten of us at the dentist for cleanings and exams, sealants and fillings.  The time spent at the dentist in addition to time spent driving to and from schools to check children out and back in have all cut significantly into my usual housekeeping and laundry routines.  Who knew that my own dentist appointment would kill all productivity for five days before the antibiotics finally made a difference?  It’s been a month spent adjusting to new work arrangements for my husband and the stress that comes with every learning curve presented by a new job.  We’ve had unexpected expenses, children in emotional meltdown, and dozens of unforeseen mini-emergencies with several of our children.  I keep telling myself that there’s a reason I lost ground instead of gaining ground.  Just as March is the month when you can see weather for all four seasons of the year in a single day, our lives have felt all over the place as well.

The experiences we had in March reinforced the importance of my goals; indeed, I feel increasingly urgent about them.  The reality of March was that I had to be a mother, and part of being a mother is doing what needs to be done right now.  We had a lot of “right now” needs.

And so part of me thinks that it makes sense, that it’s ok.  Another part of me wonders if I’m just making excuses.  Part of me feels so sad that it’s April and I have nothing substantial to show for my efforts.  And part of me says to press on, give it more time, keep working and look back later for signs of growth.  I’m trying to silence the first three thoughts and give full reign to the last.  It is, after all, the only productive thing to do.

In all of this, I also look at the month and realize that I’ve learned some really valuable lessons.  My heart has been tested.  My hopes and dreams have been refined a little bit by the difficulties we’ve faced.  I am more grateful for simple things.  I have more appreciation for how hard my children are trying to be good, for how hard some of their challenges are for them.  I have more appreciation for answers to prayer, even to those prayers spoken as I open my mouth in response to a child’s distress, thinking “I have no idea what to say right now, please put the right words in my mouth.”  The words have come.  Tears have come as well, lots of them.  I feel more humble, more dependent on God.    My faith and confidence in Him has grown.  I can see His hand in my life, and even in the things I really don’t want to deal with.  I’ve learned lessons about preparing our children to have experiences with Christ’s atonement as they negotiate their relationships with friends and peers.  I have learned more about how essential it is that we never withhold compliments and praise from teenagers.  I’ve learned how desperately they sometimes need to hear a positive word, any positive word, from any adult they have contact with.  I’ve been a mother on her knees asking God to please bless someone, anyone, to notice something good about my child and say it to them.  And I’ve wept with gratitude when that prayer was answered.  I wonder how many other mothers have prayed for this same blessing, and resolve to become someone who can be trusted to compliment people freely.

As much as we’ve been stretched, I’m aware we’re immeasurably blessed.  I know people who have been dealt terrible blows in the past month.  I have wept for them and felt sobered by the relative ease of my circumstances.  This week brought a number of opportunities to serve others.  It feels good to have done it.  I got to spend more time talking with a good friend.  We had sunshine for 3 1/2 days this week, more than we’ve had in a while (never mind the fact that it snowed last night and then went from winter to spring three or four times throughout the day today).  I did a better job of preparing our meals early in the day.  In fact, I did a better job all around in the kitchen.

March is over; April begun.  Another week awaits my best efforts.  As a family we got to watch General Conference which never fails to inspire and direct.  Life is good.  I am grateful for all I’ve learned and anxious to learn more.  Like everyone else, we have some things in life I have no solution for, and I wonder how they can possibly work out.  But it will.  It always does.  I hope that whatever I need to learn this week can be learned without so much disruption to the maintenance of home and family.  But whatever comes, we will trust the Lord.  As my husband said to me last night, “He has a plan.  Let’s let Him work it.”

Have a great week.
Jennifer

A Year of Habits, no. 12



Lately I’ve been pondering and marveling at the infinitely personalized experiences that make up each individual’s road map in life.  I’m amazed at the love and power God has to create these individual journeys for us, and his ability to nourish, test, bless and stretch us as we travel through mortality.  Sometimes the refiner’s fire comes through huge trials and sometimes it comes through a thousand little things, but we can all be assured that it does and will come for each of us.  Mine, of late, has come in the thousand little things variety, but I am thankful to be counted worthy of refinement of all.  I am grateful for my personalized version of testing, stretching and growth.

In thinking about this, I’ve also marveled a bit at the cumulative effect that individual challenges and refining can have on a family.  While all ten of us have our own particular journey to experience, we’re still a family, and personal stretching affects the group as well as the individual.  It’s been interesting to watch, to see how trials in some areas make us more patient in others, how exhaustion and worry in some moments brings new challenges in others.  What an extraordinary thing family life is.

ALL of our children have been emotionally off-balance this week.  More than once my husband and I have looked at each other in bafflement at what could possibly have ignited the emotional meltdowns that have occurred.  On one evening we had all eight of our children crying and yelling at the same time, all for different reasons, some of which we knew and understood and others which remain a mystery.  On that night we looked at each other and laughed, for that’s really your only good option in a case like that.  To cry or get upset ourselves only makes things worse, while chuckling gave us another 60 minutes of endurance.  It took us close to three hours that night to get our children in bed and to sleep, and blissful was the quiet that followed!  (I enjoyed it for about 10 minutes before falling asleep myself, too tired to be good for anything after the marathon.)

On a funny note, I was driving this week with my youngest three in the van when out of the blue my five year old son belted out these words:  “I’ll follow you until you love me!”  followed by the sweet little voice of my three year old daughter singing “Papa-watt-see!”   I shook my head and laughed.  You’d never know they have big brothers and sisters, would you?  Even the baby ended up humming the melody to herself as we drove along.  I thought again about what a delicate thing it is to find balance in our home right now, how much the little ones pick up on, how much protection and sheltering they still need, in contrast with the needs of our older ones to test their wings, have parents who are more spontaneous, more adventurous, more relaxed.  I have no idea if I’m getting it right or not.  What I would give for a lot more experience right now!

On Thursday morning I went to the Dentist for a root canal.  It was my first experience of this kind, and given my track record for having unusual experiences with dental work, I was nervous.  I asked a lot of people about them, and the universal response was that they’re no big deal.  So I went.  I came home.  And for three days the pain got worse and worse until my jaw and head were throbbing in time with my heartbeat, my vision was blurry, I couldn’t bear to eat anything.   I couldn’t think clearly, couldn’t bear to talk, couldn’t sleep.  Lucky me.   Another  special dental experience!   I was finally able to reach my dentist on Saturday and he quickly agreed with me that antibiotics were in order (my face was beginning to swell and my cheek was starting to feel warm to the touch).  Never mind that I’d just finished a round of antibiotics the day the RCT was done.   As I was experiencing this I couldn’t help but think of people living in conditions where antibiotics aren’t accessible, of people who have experienced the ravages of war, gangrene, and pain far more intense than mine.

I felt so humble.

Tonight the antibiotics are taking effect (else this post would never have been written), bringing manageable pain and the expectation that in another day or so I’ll be living normally again.  I am grateful.  Once again, I have received my daily bread.

There is a single phrase which as paraded through my mind all week:  “That faith might increase in the earth.”  As I have looked at some of my small refining experiences as well as the experiences of others I know and love, I’ve concluded that these things happen in order to increase our faith.  They happen so we can lift and serve one another, so we will fall on our knees and seek help and direction beyond our natural abilities.  They happen so that we, people who feel weak and simple in the face of life’s challenges, can testify that Jesus Christ saves us.  We can know that His grace is sufficient for the day.  We can learn for ourselves that He “fainteth not, neither is weary” and that He “giveth power to the faint, and to them that have no might he increaseth strength.”  He gives us challenges so we can learn all these things, and then he asks us to use these lessons to lift and strengthen others.

With all my heart I want to live a life that somehow increases faith in the earth.  I know that God is real.  I am one of the least of His daughters, yet He loves me enough to work in my life.  I am growing in the habit of seeing His arm, His help in my daily life, which might, in the end, be the most essential habit of all.

And for the sake of a traditional report, which I haven’t written much of late:
1.  Maintain and Reclaim is still my plan of attack on the house.  It’s still working.
2.  Finish.   I’ve been finishing lots of little things (don’t ask me why I put them off) and it feels good.  I have also been SO disciplined about not buying anything!  I’m working away at my plan to use what we need and get rid of the rest.
3.  Exercise.  Not so good.  Does not being able to eat for 3 1/2 days count for anything?
4.  Planning.  I’ve got to increase my efforts here, especially with soccer & lacrosse season upon us.  Even so, I must say that I’m not as stressed as usual with our crazy season looming.  We’ll get through it ok.
5.  Thoughtfulness.  Not so good this week.  I need to extend myself more, and make more time for service.
6.  Reading.  Still working on the same book, which is both bad and good.  Bad, because I intended to finish by now, but good, because I have this strange habit of reading 4 or 5 books at once but I’m not letting myself start another until I’m done.
I’m sure there’s more, but that’s all that comes to mind.  I’m off for a welcome night’s rest.

Wishing you a truly wonderful week, Jennifer

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