Two days ago I sat across from the love of my life and
expressed to him my frustrations with attempting to prioritize my passions
during this glorious, much- deserved, and long-awaited summer break. As a teacher for the past few years I
have experienced the wonder of summer in a whole new manner than when I was a
kid. Those childhood summer breaks were filled with church camp, swimming, and
sleeping late. These days I sleep until just after dawn, build something, write
something, or spend the afternoon with my nieces and nephew. It’s definitely an
age-appropriate change, but change nonetheless.
This summer, particularly, I’ve been plagued with the
inability to sort through my thoughts and projects in a way that would make
sense; a way that would lend themselves to their level of importance in my
head. This battle is impossible because the level of importance continues to
fluctuate with my moods, level of inspiration, supplies available, or time. I
keep this running list of things I want to do; things I want to accomplish and
I check it off from time to time. The trouble with all this time on my hands is
there are no deadlines, no schedule to keep that budgets my time for me. I wake
up and want to blog about the project I built the night before, but that
project led me to another idea and if I waste time blogging about it then I
won’t have the time to actually do the next project I thought about doing. Both
of those activities end up taking a backseat to the Houston Children’s Museum
outing I want to take with my nieces and nephew. I can’t go there because I
have two projects and a blog to do. Therefore, instead of completing the
projects, or blogging, or experiencing the afternoon at a museum I end up cycling
through all my reasons a dozen times and accomplishing nothing at all.
Mikey so patiently listened to me drone while we enjoyed
nachos and chicken soup. He let me say everything I wanted; agreed and nodded
at the appropriate times, or interjected the necessary nod or eyebrow raise.
When I finally took a breath he said, “I know exactly where you are. All you
have to do is relax and what you actually love to do and find most important
will surface to the top.” He went on to remind me how we are in transition
right now and he fully expected me to become frustrated at some point. Frankly,
I’m not always sure exactly how I feel about him knowing me so well. Some days
I love it; his insight makes me feel normal. Other days it’s infuriating.
The truth is that he’s perfectly accurate. I have all these
interests: blogging/writing, building/creating, painting, being an aunt. The
interesting thing is that with all those passions, desires, interests, whatever
you want to call them – the only time my brain slows down and the world stops
spinning is when I’m creating something new. Maybe Mikey was right – all I have
to do is relax.
Of course Mikey was right! He's always right!
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