So, I'm naming some of the feelings I am cycling through at the close of today: guilt, more guilt, greater guilt, stressed, tired, overwhelmed.
That completed to-do list is an ephemeral, pie-in-the-sky fantasy of a weak mind. Yet, I can't let go of its shiny promise and squeaky-clean virtue. And thus I set myself up for such a day as follows:
6:23AM Roll out of bed twenty minutes after alarm. Groggy.
Shower, breakfast, dress, hair, make-up, make bed, load dishwasher, pack lunch, dinner, snacks and water for the day, pack school bag, food bag, temple bag.
7:45AM Carry too-many bags to car and realize this is why my friend calls me "the bag lady."
7:55AM Get to oil change shop and am first in line just like I planned; Try to decide which of the many bags I take into the shop with me to keep occupied while waiting. Hope I can get out of there in under 40 minutes.
8:30AM Oil change, emissions inspection, headlight changed, back window washer part fixed; so elated at the fast timing and all the work done, that I pay the bill and leave the shop forgetting my school bag in the waiting room.
8:45AM Head to doctor's appointment in Alpine. Fill up the car with gas. Realize I'm missing my school bag. Call the oil change shop and have them hold on to it for me until I can get back to that part of town later in the day. Now all that schoolwork I was going to do while waiting at the doctor's office? Won't happen.
9:00AM Stop by chiropractor's office on way to doctor's appointment. They are both 20-30 minutes away from my house so I congratulate myself on dovetailing these two appointments. Plus, my back has really been hurting again.
9:15AM Sit in massage chair after adjustment and try to keep my moans of pleasure to a minimum as I spend ten delicious minutes in that particular heaven.
9:50AM Arrive at doctor's appointment 10 minutes early.
10:30AM Finally get my name called. They take my stats: blood pressure, pulse, temperature and my all-time favorite one: weight.
11:00AM Spend twenty minutes with doctor. Reminds me why I like her. She and I are on the same page philosophically about health. Love that. Read my favorite natural health magazine while waiting. (Would have done it anyway--school bag or no school bag. Just have a hard time admitting that beforehand).
11:45AM Stop at grocery store on way back to town because I'm completely out of toilet paper. Qualifies as emergency in my house.
12:05PM Pick up school bag at oil change shop. Not my most effective use of time that day.
12:30PM Stop at sister's house on my way back to work to drop off some meds I had picked up for her at the doctor's office. She has a house full of sick kids and a new baby. Spend two blissful minutes cuddling newborn.
1:00PM Land back at my desk at work. Feeling upbeat, energetic; Scarf down lunch.
1:15PM First inkling that something is not right in our little web division. One student programmer huffy, the other proposing solutions. Have to get a press release out and no time to sort through particulars.
1:59PM Leave last step on press release for assistant. Head to class. Late for the third time this week. I HATE walking into class late.
2:55PM Arrive back at desk with Halloween candy. Hoping to get everybody back on their feet and sort through the huffy brewing emotional slew from earlier.
3:15PM No time to sort. One problem with website, next problem, another problem, more problems. It is turning into one of those days where chunks of website are malfunctioning. We all move into emergency mode. Must get on top of the current rash of malfunctions.
4:30PM Between the four of us, major issues are resolved. Two students head home. The other--the one I will call Grumpy--appears in my office to unload his story of website woe. I spend the next hour cajoling, wheedling, comforting and putting him back together so he can put our website back together.
6:00PM Finally, peace and quiet for the first time.
6:02PM Time to sort my own emergency issues for the work day and handle most important items.
7:20PM Stop. Remember that I owed my part of a group project earlier that day. Hurry and wrap up my part and email it to my group. Scarf down dinner.
7:50PM Turn off the lights at work.
7:55PM Walk in to temple. Just in time to make the last session.
10:05PM Driving home. Awash in guilt. Too-busy day.
Did you learn anything from my day? My takeaway: Too-stuffed days leave me in a puddle of feelings which I must spend the next hour analyzing--thus messing up my need to go to bed so I can get up the next day and start another day all over again.
I need to relax.
I will put it on my list.
5 comments:
Agree. You need to relax. Love you Eden.
Didn't sound like "drunk dialing" to me! :) I agree though. Too busy of days do not make a happy me. I'm not programmed for that kind of schedule on an ongoing basis. Remember to breathe!!
Yikes. I will now (try to) stop complaining about my hard days.
Glad you made it to the weekend.
Last line was my FAVORITE. I think we can thank mom for the "to-do" lists.
You sound like Kami when she told me the other day that she needed to prioritize her life better... and to help she has a Steven Covey book that she wanted to read about prioritizing... but the funny thing is, it's on the bottom of her list of things to get to! I am just as guilty!
I LOVE the way you write.
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