I like how Facebook and Twitter give me these little windows into peoples' lives and what they're doing.
Quite a few people have been doing "staycations" and commenting how much they're enjoying them. One family is staying in Chicago and rediscovering all the fun things there are to do there. Another family went the short distance from their small town in Arkansas to St. Louis, to shop and see the sights. My friend was particularly excited to have the opportunity to dispose of her #5 recyclables.
Not at all glamorous.
And yet, that's what people used to do all the time, right? Go to the village for market days. Travel to the city for provisions. Somewhere along the way, the stakes got raised.
I was supposed to clean the house this weekend and never got around to it. I try to clean it every other weekend. I'm far from being a fabulous housekeeper, so stretching the cleaning to three weeks means it'll really show by next weekend.
But on Saturday I got really caught up in Sterling and spend most of the day on it. Then on Sunday we went out to breakfast with friends and ended up tooling around seeing the sights. After that, I worked on the novel just a little bit more and the day was over.
I did get the laundry done.
It used to be that I'd procrastinate forever on writing. I'd do every chore imaginable, plus some I made up on the spot, to avoid sitting down at my writing desk. I had to trick myself, or force myself, to sit down and write. Now I eye the dust bunnies collecting in the corners and think I should probably get after them one of these days, maybe after this next scene.
I think it's healthy.
Sometimes people ask us how we stay entertained, both when we lived back in our small Wyoming town and even now in the "small" city of Santa Fe. It's hard for me to explain that I never run out of things to do. I write and David studies. We read and talk and sit in the sun. We take long walks.
I've come to think that, if you set your life up the way you want it, every day becomes a staycation. It's all about enjoying the place you're in and indulging in the things you enjoy.
Sometimes what makes you happiest is to get rid of that pile of recyclables. Other times, you just need to skip the chores.
~eyeing the wilderness that was once perfect boxed hedges~
ReplyDeleteLetting the unnecessary go in favor of Sterling? Loves it. Loves it.
I so agree.
ReplyDeleteClearly the shitstorm that is my house has rubbed off on you.
ReplyDelete*cackles madly*
birds of a feather...
ReplyDeleteA friend, a former software guru, has changed her focus to promoting awareness of place. To quote her, "The experience of place can awaken the inner self and strengthen its connection with the outer world." For more about her thinking see her web site www.placekeepers.org.
ReplyDeleteInteresting, Karen - thanks!
ReplyDelete