I am seemingly an inherently efficient person. I have a time clock embedded in my
mind. I have honed the skill
of maximizing all my tasks in order to increase my free time. I wonder if it stems from a branch of
Germanic folk deep in my family tree.
I wonder if it’s time to have that clock removed.
It could just be from years of having to be efficient in order
to accomplish all my goals in the academic and career arenas. But I am known to take it to a
new level. It’s long been a
game to see how short a time I can spend on errands, housework, laundry – you
name it and I’ve played beat the clock. That allowed me to squeeze in my craft and scrapbook
projects over the years. It
allowed me to spend time with my husband.
I wouldn’t say he was overly demanding but he did enjoy having my full
attention and lots of home cooked meals. And he always wanted me to help him with his
projects. It was my pleasure
to do so. Yet when I was doing my own chores or
projects, I always had this clock in my mind and an awareness of the other
things on my endless to do list.
These days many of those items on my to do list are gone. Instead of multiple properties to
maintain, I am enjoying life in a condo where everything outside my unit is
very well attended. The time I
used to spend with my husband was initially earmarked for grieving but this
year I find that to be decreasing.
Or at least larger gaps in between the grieving. Large home cooked meals are no longer on my agenda. Yet I am finding some new joy in cooking
smaller meals for myself.
And I am rediscovering writing as a past time. I’ve been told that when I get to the other side of
grief that the ability to scrapbook will return. For now some of my projects are on hold – I know not to
force the issue.
As I contemplate my future retirement, I begin to suspect this
newly discovered free time is a good thing. It allows me to practice a new mindset. Lately when I am grocery shopping
I am fully in the moment. I go up
and down all the aisles and explore my culinary options and really learn the
store layout. I am more aware of
sale items than I used to be. And
I am remembering that I used to really like grocery shopping. Before the beat the clock mantra took
over. It reminds me of my
husband’s joy in doing the shopping after he retired.
But then again Robert was always good at living in the
moment. He never played beat the
clock. He focused on a current
task and did it extremely well.
And when he relaxed and sat outside soaking in the sun he was able to be
one with the sunshine. I used to
tease him that he had no internal clock.
I think our innate differences were part of the attraction between
us. He relied on my ability
to plan and get things done and I relied on his ability to slow me down. I think he would be proud that I am
beginning to learn the value of tossing that clock out the window.
1 comment:
That is great that you are learning to slow down and enjoy even more of the journey you are on. I tend to rush through things too, and I'm trying to learn to slow down also.
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