Jar full of rocks,
My jar is objectively
Pretty full.
I’m married,
We have four kids
Ages two to fifteen.
My husband and I both
Work full-time.
I spend time every week with my
12-step program and my church.
I see friends frequently.
Exercise daily.
Have a blog, and am
Working on a novel.
And yet,
I made a decision at the
New year:
I’m going to stop calling myself
“Busy.”
A rich life?
Absolutely.
A busy one?
No thanks.
When people asked
How I was, I always answered,
“Good.
Busy,”
The “busy” somehow a
Qualifier to the “good.”
The busier I thought of myself
And the busier I told people I was,
The busier I felt.
Just saying the word
“Busy”
Tightens my chest like
Twisting a piece of cloth.
The panic of
Not enough time,
Feeling like I’m trying to do the
Impossible:
Fit more into this span of time
Than the limitations of our world
Allow for.
Or, to tack on to the
Rocks-in-jar metaphor,
To try to cram more rocks
Into the jar than
The jar can hold.
(Pushing down on rocks to
Compress them
Is a futile exercise,
A waste of time and energy,
And can break the fragile jar-vessel.)
There have been times when I’ve
Glimpsed the
Self-induced spin I’ve
Put myself into.
Sudden breaks in the action when,
Between this and that activity,
I have an unexpected blip of unplanned time,
And I’m at a loss.
I actually grasp for the
Next thing
(Or my
So-called
Smart
Phone)
Because I’m so
Unpracticed at just
Hanging out.
Being.
There’s also a
Self-importance to my
Busyness, and an
Implication that
I don’t really have time for
You,
So if I’m standing here
Talking to you,
You’re imposing on my
Precious
Time.
(Even if I have a smile on my face.)
In the last few months,
I started to suspect that,
Maybe I’m not as
Busy
As I think I am.
I’ve got a lot of rocks in my jar,
But there are
Spaces between the rocks.
And room at the top for
New rocks,
If I want there to be.
Thinking of myself as
Busy,
I cut myself off from the
Serendipitous.
I’m so focused on
The next thing to do that
I don’t even see all these
Cool things and
Cool people
Happening around me.
I catch myself now.
When people ask me how I am,
I don’t tack on the
“Busy”
Qualifier.
I’m trying to focus more on the
Spaces between the rocks,
The air in there,
The nothingness.
Those spaces,
That’s my paradise.
That’s my wandering without aim,
My earplug-quiet and darkness
Just before sleep,
My Sunday mornings when we
Skip church,
My clocklessness,
My finding myself with
Nothing to do,
And
Not reaching for my
Smart phone.
Paradise amongst the
Rocks.