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satisfaction guaranteed

Thus far, I’ve lived a relatively healthy life. No aches in the joints or chronic pain in my back. So, in honesty, I’ve never had a full appreciation for my health. It’s one of those things you don’t miss until you’re limping around the kitchen or having weekly injection appointments. Then, all of a sudden, your body and how it feels gains in the list of things you think about throughout the day. 

I feel similarly about housework. 
Husband and I had a long discussion last night in regards to household management. (No, not an argument – we try to beat that to the punch. But perhaps you’re more holy than I and when your satisfaction drops, you’re able to contain the snippy comments and sarcasm.  Nevertheless, feelings needed shared). 
What I came to realize throughout the conversation is that a majority of my time and energy goes into the things that matter little until they go unchecked. The daily slug of picking up toys, fixing a meal, doing the dishes, washing 18 loads of laundry, picking up toys, getting kids dressed, picking up toys… these are not the tasks of immense gratification. They simply garner frustration when not completed. It’s not until you break a toe stepping on Castle Grayscull or  it’s 8pm and no one has eaten that anyone cares. 
I’ll coin the term negative significance. They matter only in their absence. 
Though living in the world of negative significance is, at times, a bit grueling, it can have its light. I’ve found many a blogger who seem to adjusted expectations so that these small things bring great joy and fulfillment. I’m just not there yet. 
Part of me wants to be. Part of me wants to fully encapsulate the saying I’ve scrawled onto a plain white sheet of paper with a blue sharpie: In life there are no great things, only small things done with great love. – Mother Teresa (I’m giving you what I wrote, not the real quote. I totally miffed that up when I wrote it down). Part of me wants to remember that “great things” are done one small thing at a time; even great cathedrals and beautiful art and meaningful relationships are built brick-by-brick, moment-by-moment. So Mama T knows her shtuff. 
But the other part of me doesn’t want to lose the ambition for *more*. Part of me doesn’t want to simply be satisfied and quelled and pacified by what is available rather than what is possible. Contentment is good when it comes to material things and defeating the lust of the world. But it’s a bad approach ushering in the Kingdom. I can’t hear Jesus saying things like “well, this is just the way life is right now.” 
I know many people in the world with all the power at their hands to make change and impact who lead very unsatisfactory lives. And it’s probably because they haven’t wiped enough snotty noses. So the solution is not to change position, but to change perspective. 
So, in that vein, it’s time to arise the children and begin the daily event of what I like to call “getting out the door with all limbs still attached.” 
 

if I didn’t know better

1. I scheduled a work call at a time I was also scheduled to take H boy to the doctor.

2. I rescheduled the call, took H to the doctor, only to find out I was scheduled to be at a different office. So I had drove 25 minutes each way to reschedule an appointment. 
3. Later, I opened the door to the new itinerant preschool teacher, whom I had written down was coming next Monday. 
4. I went to pick up my sewing machine and went to the wrong house. 
5. While trying to return home from Mr. Sewing Machine’s correct house, I went the wrong way on I-75. From a town that I visit at least weekly. 
At the risk of fielding “pregnancy brain” accusations (which I will adamantly DENY), I ask… so how was your Monday? 

in the past 24 hours

Number of times the dishwasher ran: 4

Number of times I picked up toys for them to be strewn about within minutes: at least 17
Number of people sleeping between 10pm-7am: 9, most of the time.
Number of people sleeping between 1:30pm-3pm: 6
Number of people crammed into our living room at once: 11
Number of gallons of milk consumed: 1
Number of balloons used: 175
Number of emotional meltdowns: 0
Number of times I thought to myself, “Is there anyone who has it better? I doubt it.”: Countless. 
It was a good celebration of the little man. 

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