In crisis situations, we discover what really matters to us. As the kids and I drove towards base our first day, they exclaimed that the Little Caesars appeared to have survived. I laughed with them, responding with, "Well, then, we'll be just fine, won't we?!" only to drive closer and realize that while the building was still there, what was left of it was definitely boarded up and empty. We laughed again and said, "And we'll still be fine! Even without five dollar pizza!"
Blythe...not capable of surviving without five dollar pizza. |
When we first started looking at trailers, the first one I looked at had a bunk house and a kitchen and room for a washer/dryer (all high on my list of priorities). It was small, but in my mind, it was entirely doable. I had seen nothing else and was willing to do just about anything to be back together again, even do all my cooking prep on the dinner table. The Man tried to assure me that there were bigger options--and he was right. He was thinking long term. I was thinking togetherness (and didn't realize that there were options that included togetherness and not being packed in like sardines).
I was really ruthless when picking what should come with us. And it's paid off. We actually still have a little extra storage space, for which I'm grateful. It makes me feel like there is room to breath. And I have even managed an entire drawer just for chocolate, because again: priorities. Chocolate = sanity, of which there is always short supply.
This kid prioritizes getting her way at all times. It's almost like she's about to turn two... |
But the truth is that you don't have to go through a crisis situation or live in a season of scarcity (or smallness) in order to discover your true priorities. You just have to pay attention. The problem is that most of us don't like to pay attention until we really have to. We prefer to keep going through the motions in our comfortable--or sometimes just busy--lives without really reflecting on whether or not the mundanities of our life reflect what we say truly matters to us. Many of us use this time of year to reflect on who we truly are and who we actually want to be. May I suggest that we use a little of our time to actually assess where our priorities lie? Not what we say our priorities are, but what they actually show themselves to be? Let's pay attention to where our time is going, where our money is spent, where our energy gets used up, what items are taking up space in our homes... And if things don't line up with what we really want our priorities to be, maybe we can shake things up a bit. Set that alarm a little earlier (maybe bribe yourself with an illuminated Bible and some quality colored pencils), schedule that babysitter for a date night, pull out those running shoes, take a nap with the toddler, dust off your library card, clean out that junk drawer...and maybe fill it up with chocolate instead.
Some of us also prioritize happy skunk socks.. |
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