First I need to start with a confession - "Bless me blogging community for I have neglected you. It has been years since my last blog post." Phew. I feel better and I hope you'll forgive me and read on.
Today I was thinking about what it would take to keep myself and my family healthy, whole body healthy, during these stressful, anxious, and isolating times. My daughter, who is 15 years old now, just began her new normal of being at home all day. And since her first thought was "Whoopee... vacation," it came as a great shock today when I laid out what our daily routine would be starting Monday (I'm not completely evil.) But it wasn't just her desire to sit in bed and do media all day that made me realize we needed some structure. Since my husband started working from home a little over a week ago we have blown through our crisis inventory (bought at Costco just before the real mayhem started) of cookies and chips. Meanwhile, I've been missing my Barre classes and feeling guilty for not replacing them with any other form of exercise. If this was the new normal something was going to have to change, and fast! Years ago I helped teach a class at my church for new moms in how to keep our whole being healthy. And, while covid-19 is a long way from new motherhood, the daily life impacts do have some similarities that I think could help inform what we can do now to stay balanced. Central to the class was the idea that to be healthy we had to keep three areas of our life in balance, our physical, mental and psychological/spiritual health. I want to take each of these and describe some ways we are choosing to create space for them in our small (very small) world right now. Physical This is what my daughter said when I told her we would be including 30 min of exercise in our daily routine from here on out.... "Thank God. I hate exercise but if I take the bike at least I can get away from you and Dad for a bit." To be fair... I'd just laid out my plan and she wasn't super happy with me. At the same time... well, I can already see the writing on the wall with all of us sniping at each other. So I added taking breaks from each other to my 'psychological' balance checklist and moved on. I like her idea of the bike ride... but here are some other options I gave her: - Running the stairs in our house - Yoga - try these beginner poses - TV exercise workouts - Walking the neighborhood with or without the dog - stretching My usual activity is much more intense than any of these... but the most important thing is that it is doable and enjoyable enough to become part of the routine. Mental Given equal access requirements school is not offering online learning for the students. Mostly the school is treating this as a vacation. Not only is this a bad idea because we have no idea how long this will really last (and much as I'd love to think vacation is the new normal... I'm not that naive) but it also creates that free for all mentality that actually adds to stress and anxiety - things we need less, rather than more, of right now. My husband is finding mornings are the best and easiest time for getting real work done... so no more sleeping in, starting Monday the alarm goes off and he finds a quiet spot to work. My job of driving and sourcing has just decreased immensely. I suddenly find I have time to write again and I want to model mental activity for my daughter, so here I am posting again. And my daughter...although she may complain, her brain is a symphony of activity that requires lots more instruments than just youtube video to survive. If I clear the space for her I know she will actually enjoy digging in to her learning on her own. Her new normal routine will include two hours of textbook/school work (two different subjects) plus I've asked her to learn how to do something new by the time life as we know it resumes. examples - Reciting a memorized poem - Playing (well) a new song on her piano - Researching a new topic to discuss with friends/family - Learning to knit or sew or cook or garden - Learning a new style of art she hasn't practiced before Walking away from this time with a sense of mastery over something new may make it feel less like a loss and more like a gift of time. Psychological/Spiritual I believe this will be the most challenging area to keep balanced of the three. Psychologically we need human interaction and community in order to feel good. The greatest sacrifice we must make right now is in this area. No more cinema, concerts, sporting events, even the daily interaction I get from grocery store or Starbucks visits is limited. So what can we do to keep a sense of being connected to those around us. Maybe a better way to think of it is what can we do to reach out to others. This is one of the reasons we psychologically require interaction... it is because it gives us a chance to support and think of someone other than ourselves. Although in person reaching out goes against the need for isolation/containment... there are other ways we can spread a sense of community. - I love this video clip of the balcony happy hour /singing in Italy... happening daily now at 6:00 pm. Italylink. Can we do a front porch type version? - A daily email to a friend.... especially someone I haven't written in a while. Not to share covid complaints, but to share important memories from our relationship and catch up on what has been happening in our heart and mind since we last talked. - Same for phone calls. Let's vent a little about covid-19... share our 'horror stories' and then move on the the little things that happened in our day that we are grateful for. - And on this line... gratitude logs in general are the very best way to stay psychologically healthy. - For me, prayer. And since my church is not doing mass anymore I know I will be missing some of the Lenten traditions that give me a sense of belonging and spiritual focus. Our church has left their doors open for individual visits so I will be taking advantage of these. - I am so very grateful to have a community on Twitter that I follow who work hard to understand world events. They also are great at bringing light to trying times through humor and concern. I'm going to bring some ideas to that community for how we can broaden even more this connection. Tomorrow I plan to invite my twitter friends to start a virtual book club. We will choose a book, read it, and then use the #title to congregate on a set day and discuss. I'll lead with some questions and that is all it usually takes to get these folks and all the ones who follow them, to join in a discussion. Imagine if all of us were talking about the same book at the same time. What a sense of shared connection. Feel free to join in by following me @dwilsted. I know I have over-stayed my welcome in this long post... so I will end it here with the promise of more to come soon. I am so grateful to all my virtual friends out there and hope and pray that your way through these times will be healthy and light. Deanne
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"Argh... a uniform! For the next five years. This is totally unfair."
My seventh grade daughter was talking with friends about the announcement that had been made at school that day. There was to be a new school uniform policy with, horror of all horrors, beige uniforms. I heard about it at school, and then on the ride home, and then at home for about an hour. She was up in arms... and I expect it will be an interesting school day. Because.... it was all an elaborate April Fools Day joke being played on the students by the teachers and staff. I admire their courage and creativity. And I especially appreciate that it has given the students a sense of shared purpose... and later, hopefully, a sense of humor:>) We haven't done a lot of April Fools Day jokes in my family... but that has made the times we do all that much more successful. For example, one year my daughter and I made a "Just Married" sign and attached it, along with cans hanging from string, off the back of my husband's car. It took him three blocks, and a bunch of honks from other cars, to figure out what the sound was. I am glad one day a year we have a celebration of humor. It is something we need more of in our world, something that unites us. We share with everyone around the world the desire for a good laugh and silliness. As well, humor can heal us of our need to take ourselves and everything around us too seriously- to focus on the tree and miss the forest. A very good case of this happened last year when my daughter was at a residential child anxiety center healing from her OCD symptoms. Her roommate, who had a fear of contamination, had just the week before gotten GAK Putty stuck in her hair. It took one of the Resident Assistants (RA) hours, lots of yelling and crying, and the odd use of Peanut Butter, to get it out. To say it was traumatic for the child and the RA would be putting it lightly. Flash forward a week... the 1st of April, and the same RA is on duty. My daughter and her roommate come up with the plan of recreating the scene by using a big glob of hair conditioner. You have to realize that even talking about putting something like this in her hair would raise extreme levels of anxiety in this child, and yet humor allowed her to overcome this fear and torment the RA with this trick. I am sure it is still being talked about at the center. I know my daughter and her friend were proud of their accomplishment. And the roommate's mom and I still talk about how proud we were of the girls for having the courage to play the trick. Middle School is hard. Being on the cusp of adulthood it is easy for kids to take themselves really seriously. I am so very glad, today, that with the humor of an April Fool's Day trick well played the students will have a brief respite from themselves and get to just be silly and laugh. I hope your April Fool's Day is also filled with laughter. Deanne p.s. I always love to hear about good April Fool's Day jokes... so leave yours in the comments below. Thanks. |
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June 2020
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