HomeLife

this is where the time goes . . .

At ten o’clock last night, I sat on the sofa, sighed deeply and wondered to where in the world my day had escaped.

I told Kevin that the same thing happened to me every evening around ten o’clock.

I entertained thoughts of jealousy of my husband.

There he was, ten o’clock, clearly finished for the day.

Resting clothes, resting posture, resting mindset.

He’d put in his hours, worked his tasks and was done, if not content, with his completion of what had been set before him that day.

And there I was, ten o’clock, mind racing with a to-do list and a wish-I-could-do list.

A sigh of – this is the first time I’ve been sort of alone all day with my own thoughts.  Should I start that one project I’ve been wanting to finish?  I’d love to read a chapter of that novel by my bedside.  Oh, I need to register the kids for that class before I go to bed.  Wait, we’re going on a picnic tomorrow and I need to plan what we’ll be eating.  Did we ever finish the dishes from dinner?  Shoot, I need to look over that science lesson for this week – I think I need to pick up some clay for that lesson on the brain.

And there’s no relaxing clothes and no relaxing posture and no relaxing brain happening on my end of the couch.

Where did my day go yesterday?

I spent a lot of it at doctor’s offices and appointments.

Dental appointments for three.

Pick up Bergen’s new eyeglasses.

Surprised Kevin with a lunch stop at his office.

A pretty good music study in the afternoon.

Rescued a stranded baby mockingbird from imminent death by our over-zealous dog.

A surprisingly tasty dinner made entirely from ingredients from local farmers.  (Even the butter!)

A successful attempt at creating goat’s milk ice cream.  (Also from a local goat farm we toured last fall.)

A little free range time in the yard for our ever-growing chickens.

And a short visit with our pal Hannah and even a short appearance at our house by our pal Mandy.

Yes, sometimes I have to make a list.

Because that’s how my brain can be allowed to make the leap to relaxing posture.

(And I refuse to make a list of all the things I needed to do – or should have done – that did not get completed.  Too counter-productive.)

I imagine, if you are at all like me, and I sort of think every mother struggles with this on some level, a list reminds me that my day was, indeed, full and busy and good.

Want to share your list of yesterday?

 

2 Comments

  • Rachel

    Up before 5 with a sick husband. Up for good by 6 with the two year old. Outside playing by 7. Breakfast of sausage and eggs. More playing. To the mall to walk laps, throw monies in the fountain and play on the playground. Errands. Home for lunch and multiple timeouts. Oh, and some finger painting. Get the two year old to nap. Eat my own lunch, read some blogs, shower, start bread for dinner, try to nap away a migraine. But, third load of laundry ready for the dryer. Up from nap. More timeouts. Wash dishes. More laundry. Finish bread. Make hubby's coffee for the morning. Dinner with a friend (ahhh..send our combined three children to the backyard. Blessed adult conversation!!!). Eat and then back outside (ahh…sitting in camp chairs on the cool deck with adult conversation). Wrangle the child into the carseat. Home for bath. Start bedtime medicine routine. Hubby is home!!!! Finish bedtime medicine routine. More cleaning. Pack hubby's lunch. Lay down to catch an episode of Eureka on Netflix. Soaked diaper/pajamas/sheets/blankets by 11:30 (crying child). Strip child, dry him off and redress him (all while he is sound asleep). Pray he doesn't roll off the changing table in his sleep while I remake his bed.

    Somewhere in there I also wrote cards to the women at my MOPS table, ate a snack or two, and put away the multiple loads of laundry. Oh, and took care of the pets and filled our humidifier.

    I have the same issue with my husband, except I end up resenting that he is done for the day while I feel like I never am. So once in a while I leave dishes in the sink or clothes in the dryer, but often I find myself repeating, quietly, "it's all my job." That helps me feel a little more like I am serving and a little less like I am a slave.