A dear friend said this to me when I was bemoaning the fact that I hadn’t done much that day. What a perfect reframe for those days when neither your body nor your mind are up to doing much, so you read a bit, watch a movie, call someone up for a chat.
Actually, it’s a great way to look at your day-to-day life altogether. It puts a different value on everything you do because it poses the questions:
‘Is this a day when I listened to my own state?’
‘Have I felt good today, or have I pushed myself to do stuff?’
‘Have I taken pleasure in what I have done, or has it felt more like duty?’
‘Have I been doing, or have I been being?’
There are so many parts of our day-to-day living we don’t value, especially when retired or on holiday. Allowing ourselves a slow start to the morning, enjoying a wander round the garden, chatting with a neighbour, tidying out a messy drawer, doing some on a hobby we have, or just sitting with a good cup of coffee or glass of wine and being peaceful.
We feel as if we have to prove we have done something productive, ‘important’, so we don’t waste time.
Yet all these moments in a day have immense value for our spirits, our being, and need to be seen as such. Wouldn’t it be lovely to have positive answers to those questions I posed every single day! It would mean that we were doing a good job of living, the most important work we will ever do.
I am revising my assessment of my days to give value to all the times I feel good about my activity or inactivity, the times I feel like I’m living and being, not just doing. Care to join me?
Excellent thoughts and very timely. Thanks Di