Here is today’s journal question from my 5-year diary with 1,825 potential answers: If you could move anywhere, where would you move?
This answer is easy for me: Nowhere.
In this past year, I have moved three times. I feel that I have fulfilled the spirit of new adventure that this question suggests, and I’m sticking with Nowhere. I love where I live, and there is nowhere else on the planet where I would rather be living.
Stuff. What is it that George Carlin said about stuff? “A house is just a place to keep your stuff while you go out and get more stuff.” While I completely agree with him, I have to say that there is something comforting about creating an atmosphere that invites relaxation, creativity, and a sense of family. It is a good thing . . . even when I find that I have accumulated more than my little shell can hold.
I am currently reading Marie Kondo’s the life-chaning magic of tidying up. If you haven’t heard of it, just google Marie Kondo + joy and you will read about her gentle and successful de-cluttering techniques. I have only read up to page 61 and you should see my sock drawers! They have major Wow! factor.
In order to create a home that generates joy, it is necessary to say good bye to those things that have fulfilled their function and duty. The sorting is quite the process, but I am working through it by taking baby steps. I know that, once I have read the entire book and taken a stab at categorizing all/most of my stuff, I am going to need to read it again and start the de-cluttering all over again. Although I can be a quick study in some areas of my life, I accept that I am going to have to give it one more pass before I feel like I am done creating my space of Kondo-esque joy.
To say this undertaking is intimidating might sound a little dramatic; time feels limited and the sorting is time-consuming. But I shall persist and get to the place where I have made a dent and can go into my next move with better spirits and less drudge-y vibes.
I remembered this BBC video about hermit crabs while pondering this question. It is simply captivating, what with nature being so fascinating when caught with such detail on film: the narration, the science, the earnestness and the ingenuity of the crabs — all make for quite the video narration. Enjoy and, should you be in the midst of a move, I wish you the best. [This video is very brief . . . only a few minutes and not a long documentary. I think it will perk up your day if you take the time to view it. :)]
I don’t know why but if I watch this once, I watch it twice. There is something just so synchronous and relatively amiable about the hermit crabs’ system of figuring out an orderly solution.
So how about you? If you could move anywhere on the planet, where would you go?
Life is a lively event. Enjoy your space, imbue it with joy, and jettison the rest.
What’s stopping you?
Author bio: Kennedy Farr’s passion for writing caught light at the age of four when she first learned how to spell her name on a sheet of lined tablet paper. Kennedy is a daily writer and blogger, a lifelong learner, and a true believer that something wonderful is happening right now in this very moment. Kennedy lives high on the mountainside of an emerald-green island in the Pacific Northwest.
Website:https://theunseenwordsproject.com/
Twitter:https://twitter.com/theunseenwords
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But I was so craving Different in my life. Better. More centered and mindful. I remembered reading that if you lay a wooden spoon across a pot of boiling pasta that it won’t over-boil. The pasta can boil merrily away with no more messy stove to clean up. So simple and easy . . . and it works! This Wooden Spoon trick reminded me that life need not be so overly complicated. Just try . . . and do . . . and lay the spoon across the pot. And try again. It is absolutely possible to turn a moment of my day into a gesture of mindfulness. I can make it happen. I will make it happen. I scrawled across the top of the wall-mounted white board in my office with my blue marker: You’ve got this! Try Something New! Today! I mean it!
You get the idea. I called an old friend just to say hi. I bought Swiss chard at the vegetable stand. I wrote a long overdue letter. I told someone about my current writing project. I had dinner at a restaurant that I had been wanting to check out. I took photographs of garbage. I added kale to my morning smoothie. I had fun with some color and painted on canvas. And another new thing for me? I set aside judgment of “what is good” when I was done painting. I simply valued the experience and the time spent swirling color around.
I started reading my horoscope. I subscribed to a new-word-of-the-day website. I started blogging. I bought three tiny wooden tops, which are proving to create a really relaxing “stop point” during work and study time at my desk. I spin the tops and, while they are spinning, I do absolutely nothing. I learned that an absence of activity can feel pretty good.
Would you like to share in this challenge with me? Is there something new that you have been really wanting to do?
Nothing like a little convoluted writing to unsquiggle a simple question. My takeaway from today’s question: Gaining is the same as Losing. Perspective sometimes wins out over reality. It’s time for me to think on Abundance Theory and keep focused on the sunny side. Eventually time gets us to where we want to be heading . . . which potentially leads to the next question: Where am I going anyway? A question to be answered on another day . . .
I came upon this 3-D message as I was hiking around Mountain Lake last Sunday. It was at the top of a good uphill stretch, and it gave me much to think on as I finished the hike. I imagined that someone must have paused at the crest to rest, all the while feeling grateful for that moment in time.
Today’s journaling is fun, simple, quick, and includes working with some fun and easy pie charts that portray the Circle of Life . . . your Circle of Life. You can download this enlightening prompt by clicking on the aqua-blue link below:
Click on the aqua-blue link below for today’s journaling prompt: Your Great Escape Plan
Color does not add a pleasant quality to design – it reinforces it. – Pierre Bonnard
Click on the sky blue link below for today’s journal prompt. Have fun discovering (and making!) your leap!
I was flipping through the pages of my 5-year journal . . . and of the 1,825 answers that it could contain, I have filled in 53 answers. As I was reading and reflecting on what I had written, I came across this question:
Two weeks ago, when my two best girl friends came to visit, we got out a stack of small canvases and we painted. We didn’t watch a movie. We didn’t go out for dinner. Rather we snacked on a jumbo bag of chips and salsa, sipped wine, and painted for hours. It was fun, rewarding, stimulating, and enlightening. I made an enormous mess and, being the kind of friends that they are, they helped me to clean up my spatters that had followed an unanticipated trajectory across the room.
Creativity. It isn’t what you make that makes you a Creative. It’s the feeling you create while you are creating. Be it something as simple as cutting and pasting images of birds or something as rewarding as nailing those last few measures of “Allegro” — it is all a symbol of how I choose to feel while I experience and savor time. So simple really when I remove all self-imposed external expectations.
Playing my mandolin every single day —> Sitting in with that fun Monday band at the book store
Your personality . . . what is it exactly? Aside from the usual adjectives of fun or moody or sunny or temperamental or intense or Type A or laid back or . . . what exactly? What does it really mean to be assigned a personality type?
I leave you today with the prayer, the wish, the hope, and the thought that today is a good day for you. A truly good day. One of gratitude and filled with micro moments that tell you that Now is Now and life is evolving, constantly evolving, as something that is wonderful. If this moment isn’t all that great, just wait for the next one. It will be here before you know it — full of promise and full of timshel. With some refining, life really can be borne from “the glory of the choice: . . . keeping “the way open.”