Sometimes too much of a good thing is too much of a good thing. All of the days in my life are now Saturdays with only an errand or two on the agenda and the rest of the day to play. No one thinks about being in such a situation some day when they are working a 50-hour workweek. Let me give you a glimpse of the future so that you will not wander around with that deer in the headlights expression when you get here...you WILL someday. What can happen is that, first, you lose total track of time. You head off to your Thursday haircut and are surprised that everyone looks a little too directly at you when you walk in the door. Then you find out that today is actually Wednesday and you hairdresser doesn't come in until Thursday...tomorrow! Congrats, you just gained one whole day to your week of playtime.
I gain days and lose days with abandon. They melt like snowflakes on the desert floor and I sigh with guilt when I lay my head against the pillow each evening realizing that one more jeweled snowflake has melted away and will never be seen again. This also leads one to become a stranger to that feeling called motivation. One does what one wants to do, NOT what one should do or needs to do or must do or even has to do.
I wander around my yard with either a camera or a garden trowel in hand until the angle of the sun reminds me that I should be thinking about dinner or calling a family member or getting the details together for that trip that is coming up. It is like I was released from some time travel machine in a fantasy land and then the machine starts blinking reminding me I am back on the clock.
I used to work with lazy people like me. I hated how they got the same pay check as I when all they did was show up to work and then wander from one office conversation to the next until the afternoon sun told them they had to do a few things at their desk before they headed home. Retirement will not seem strange to them.
I, on the other hand, was full of motivation. This motivation got me nowhere, but it certainly was overflowing in my spirit and probably irritated the hell out of other people around me at my work and certainly made my family roll their eyes on the weekends. I could cram more items on a Saturday to-do list than anyone I knew, and just like the energizer bunny, get the majority of them done before the sun set. I once painted an entire new 3,000 square foot house - primer, trim and stain - on just a few weekends.
Now my motivation is hiding somewhere. I have a bedroom that has had spackle spots and faded paint for several years, I have floors with carpets that need cleaning, I have a fall car trip to plan, and I really, really, really should clean out a closet or two since I can no longer tightly close the doors! But it looks like we just might get a nice sunset this evening down at the dock...so I will follow hubby who is checking on the crabs and then a couple of hours later my hunger will eventually make me walk back up and start dinner. (THAT's where my motivation is, in my stomach. Who knew?)
(And of course I went to here to read Moannie's version of aging after finishing writing this! We are both so cheerful these days!)
I gain days and lose days with abandon. They melt like snowflakes on the desert floor and I sigh with guilt when I lay my head against the pillow each evening realizing that one more jeweled snowflake has melted away and will never be seen again. This also leads one to become a stranger to that feeling called motivation. One does what one wants to do, NOT what one should do or needs to do or must do or even has to do.
I wander around my yard with either a camera or a garden trowel in hand until the angle of the sun reminds me that I should be thinking about dinner or calling a family member or getting the details together for that trip that is coming up. It is like I was released from some time travel machine in a fantasy land and then the machine starts blinking reminding me I am back on the clock.
I used to work with lazy people like me. I hated how they got the same pay check as I when all they did was show up to work and then wander from one office conversation to the next until the afternoon sun told them they had to do a few things at their desk before they headed home. Retirement will not seem strange to them.
I, on the other hand, was full of motivation. This motivation got me nowhere, but it certainly was overflowing in my spirit and probably irritated the hell out of other people around me at my work and certainly made my family roll their eyes on the weekends. I could cram more items on a Saturday to-do list than anyone I knew, and just like the energizer bunny, get the majority of them done before the sun set. I once painted an entire new 3,000 square foot house - primer, trim and stain - on just a few weekends.
Now my motivation is hiding somewhere. I have a bedroom that has had spackle spots and faded paint for several years, I have floors with carpets that need cleaning, I have a fall car trip to plan, and I really, really, really should clean out a closet or two since I can no longer tightly close the doors! But it looks like we just might get a nice sunset this evening down at the dock...so I will follow hubby who is checking on the crabs and then a couple of hours later my hunger will eventually make me walk back up and start dinner. (THAT's where my motivation is, in my stomach. Who knew?)
(And of course I went to here to read Moannie's version of aging after finishing writing this! We are both so cheerful these days!)