Thursday, August 4, 2011

Changes, Shifts, How Odd

I've been reading No More Mondays by Dan Miller and trying to take responsibility for my own life. Well, I've been taking responsibility for years. In fact I never haven't. How do you like that grammatical construction? Sometimes you just need a little coaching, and sometimes it's a matter of combining the right word with the right time. I don't understand why that is, but it is.

I've been receiving good advice for years. I've even been able to give myself some of it. What I have a hard time doing is receiving, not assenting. I can hear what you say; I can agree that you're right. That doesn't mean that I can actually implement it. It doesn't matter how practical the advice. It doesn't matter how badly I need it, or how much I agree that the advice is good. I have taken advice very badly over the years, but not in the way you might think.

So again I say, I've been reading No More Mondays by Dan Miller. Is there anything magical about Dan Miller? No. Does he have the answers to all of life's problems? No. Can I hear him better than I can hear anyone else? No.

But yesterday I asked myself, "What do you like about the way things are right now?" and "What don't you like about the way things are right now, today, right here?"

I like that I am writing. I like that I am continually thinking about how I might write something up or what I might talk about next. I like that I am taking it all more seriously--the movies, the television, the music, the conversations, the books, the games with my husband, and more, e.g. the things I do--and thinking about the meaning that all of these activities and experiences hold. I like that I begin to see a way to live more thoughtfully.

I like that my husband is home with me so much of the time. I like that we have gotten into something of a rhythm, where he gets to work on the projects that matter to him, and we spend large quantities of time together when he isn't working on those projects. I like that I have been able to participate in those projects, even if only to a limited extent. I like that we are beginning to be more unified than ever before.

I like that by the occasional happy accident I actually do get a good meal on the table. I like that I am understanding and enjoying more as I read the Old Testament early every morning, sometimes interspersing it with the New.

I don't like my lack of energy, my inability to exercise, the fact that I haven't been blocking out dedicated periods of time to give my full attention to the children. I don't like that my home is disorganized, and that I haven't managed to get on top of things, even though it has been my desire for a long, long time. These are things I can do something about.

I don't like that we have so little income. What I do like is how Dan Miller reminds me that this is now. It isn't forever. The fact that my husband is focusing on a project that springs from who he is, who God made him to be...that is a good thing. That's the way it ought to be, and we can wait for a good result. We are free to still wait because God has provided a way for us to do so through the miracle of a savings account that I wouldn't have thought could exist when we spent $6000 to buy a van several years ago. I like that writing is starting to become something I can do, because I'm doing it however imperfectly.

I hate reading self-help books, and as one reviewer of Dan Miller's book shared, the first seven chapters or so of this one are repetitive positive-thinking material that doesn't seem all that productive, but somehow through this coaching that would be oh-so-easy to ignore, my perspective is being subtly altered and cleared.

I think this is a God-thing.

(I hope to review Miller's book in greater detail sometime later, probably after I have finished it.)

1 comment:

Jim said...

Thank you for this post, especially the following sentences. They express something that, until now, has only been a vague notion that I've had about my own life. It wasn't even something I consciously could think about until I read this post. "I've been receiving good advice for years. I've even been able to give myself some of it. What I have a hard time doing is receiving, not assenting. I can hear what you say; I can agree that you're right. That doesn't mean that I can actually implement it. It doesn't matter how practical the advice. It doesn't matter how badly I need it, or how much I agree that the advice is good."

That's good writing, right there.