Since the last post there was a crazy whirlwind of school starting for both of my kids - and both of their schools are super-involved. It is something I both love and dislike:
- I love it because I meet great people and friends, that are hard to find when you're an adult and balancing work and family. I also love to be able to go to their schools, read a book to the kids, see them at recess - and feel more comfortable with the world they are in (it doesn't feel like a black box to me)
- I dislike it because it is so involved. It creates a lot of stress for me because I really, really want to do art duty, lunch duty, be involved in pta stuff, join committees (I love that stuff). The reality is I also have a full time job to balance, a long a commute and in those extra hours before/after work, I want to spend time with my kids and husband. Oh - and try and squeeze in time for me, too (why does that always seem to come last?)
It was a good reality check that I need to start taking care of myself. I really mean it this time.
I started by talking to a counselor about how to better handle my stress. To absolutely no surprise to me he said "First things, first - you need to find something that makes YOU happy". A bit ironic that it took me 3 years, two stress-related illnesses to come to the same conclusion that this blog was originally about.
One thing he said that really stuck, though, was: "Do you think you are allowing yourself to have something to do that you love?". Interesting question, I don't know. The possible theory is that I have so many obligations and guilt about not sending every moment outside of work with my kids, that maybe I won't allow myself to do something I love. Could be - but I have to somehow make this a priority.
Ever since having the shingles I have been regularly practicing some small things to make my life less stressful.
- I meditate every day.
- I take the train in and read a book (instead of driving)
- I say no to taking on more responsibility
- I only go to events that I want to go to
- We don't go to every kid birthday (there is almost 1-2 every weekend)
- I am taking time to try new things (I am trying a yoga workshop this weekend)
On a similar note to this thread, I watched an interesting TED talk (I love them) about Work/Life Balance. My favorite part was don't try to work/life balance every day - spread it over some time and make small changes that have a big impact. It is definitely worth a watch.
I will admit that a lesson I've learned, the older I get, is that my priorities are the people in my home. Me and my three guys. Yes, I'm a daughter, a friend, a sister, a worker, a (fill in blank here). But, this house is my number one. So, when I start to think about extra stuff, I always ask if it's going to benefit us (me included) for me to do whatever it is. Lots of different benefits of course, financial, emotional, spiritual. But there's never an end to the stuff I COULD do, but physically, there's only so much a person can do. I choose the things that bring us the most benefit-cost/benefit style-and I let the rest go.
ReplyDeleteI think the key is allowing myself to not feel bad about it.
My test? Will I regret not doing this, today, tomorrow, next month? Go from there. But, I don't feel bad anymore when I say, "I'm sorry. I just can't right now." The world expects us--especially women--to say yes to every little thing. There's power in just saying no.
XOXO. Thinking of you, girlie!
Thanks, Marnee! - I am definitely making an effort to do that and being more mindful of every decision I make - and hopefully in the process I can find something that I like doing on my own, too - that space to let go of the natural stresses of being a parent..
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