Categories
Fulfillment Faith

Negativity kills

They say that one of the most important things you need in a survival situation is PMA: a positive mental attitude. A self-defeating outlook is, well, self-defeating. If you don’t think you can build a shelter, it’ll only make it harder to build a shelter. On the other hand, if you believe you can build a shelter, even if you don’t really know how, at least you’re not adding more obstacles to your path. Blueprint. Whatever.

I’ve been in a pretty negative mood lately. Rebecca is teething—and this is way harder than it was for Hayden. (Think near-constant holding, squirming, nursing and interrupted sleep just weeks after we finally got her sleeping through the night.) Hayden, meanwhile, has developed a disturbing inability to sleep at night, too, but his waking is without apparent cause. Oh, and have I mentioned how much worse three has been than two so far?

My outlook has grown steadily gloomier. I began feeling my children and my life were completely out of control, mostly because I was obviously an inadequate mother. What else could explain the constant tantrums, child-juggling (and disappointing) and general overwhelmed-ness?

By Monday, I was walking in a no-sleep-constant-screaming-from-one-of-the-three-of-us haze. I was too down to care about needing a shower or the chest-high pile of laundry spilling off the couch (at least it was clean) or dinner or grocery shopping or anything else. I didn’t care if I slept, since I figured I wouldn’t.

And then Tuesday came (AKA today). In my feed reader, I came across an article on negativity and perfectionism. Sometimes the good is the enemy of the best, when we while away our days with good things but not essential things. But sometimes the perfect is the enemy of the good.

As mothers, we don’t have to be perfect all at once. I believe that our lives on Earth are a journey, progressing towards (eventual, heavenly) perfection. God doesn’t ask us to make ourselves perfect overnight, or even all by ourselves. Even if you don’t subscribe to my church, I think everybody is trying a little harder to be a little better.

Sometimes we hold ourselves back from that progress by holding up a “perfect mother” (real or imaginary) as the standard, one that we’ll never measure up to. And because we don’t measure up, we beat ourselves up. But really, that attitude only defeats us before we’ve even begun to try. It doesn’t help anything to put myself down, so this morning, I rubbed the sleep from my bleary eyes and smiled at my (constantly) nursing baby.

Though I didn’t think about this at the time, I see now that this morning, I chose happiness.

Today wasn’t perfect, but it was a heck of a lot better than yesterday. And when it comes down to it, I think that general upward trend is good enough.

Categories
Contests

January/February Group Writing Project Finale

To those of you who entered the January/February Group Writing Project: I didn’t forget you! We’ve had a lot going on around here and it’s far from over, but I couldn’t put this off any longer.

We have a great array of entries on the theme of “choosing happiness,” many of them dealing with trials and faith:

Now, feel free to spread the link love by copying the above list (instructions) and posting it to your own blog. Believe me—they all deserve it.

The Winna!
Chosen at random the winner of our prize, a $30 Amazon.com gift certificate, is <drum roll>…

Fog by An Ordinary Mom

Congratulations, AOM, on not only winning the gift certificate (again, she was chosen at random!) but also on continuing to work through difficult times. The gift certificate will be winging its way to you soon!

Categories
Contests

GWP: Choosing Happiness Part III

We’re finishing up the January group writing project on choosing happiness, and our last four entries are all stellar!

So read, comment, and keep your eyes open for the finale and the full list tomorrow!

Categories
Contests Fulfillment

Finding and choosing happiness

At my sister-in-law’s house, she has a painting that says, “We tend to seek happiness when happiness is actually a choice.” (I’ve mentioned this before, but I finally found where I wrote down the quote.)

I think that happiness and fulfillment have that in common—we think we’ll find these things and voilà—we’ll be set for life. Fulfillment and happiness do seem to go hand in hand. But for both of them, it is in the end a choice. To feel happy or fulfilled, we have to choose to be, not just seek them and wait for them to be bestowed upon us.

Granted, it’s also not just as easy as deciding “Yeah, I’m going to be happy now” or “Yeah, I’m going to be fulfilled now.” It’s something that we have to recapture every day. I think it’s like a Harold B. Lee quotation about personal testimonies: “Testimony isn’t something you have today, and you are going to have always. A testimony is fragile. It is as hard to hold as a moonbeam. It is something you have to recapture every day of your life.”

So I’ve tried to recapture that happiness every day by focusing on the times and actions that do make me think I wouldn’t give this up for anything. Times like Hayden voluntarily walking into Rebecca’s room as she’s struggling to fall asleep and singing her to sleep; Rebecca craning her neck just to catch a glimpse of me; Hayden asking to snuggle with me; Rebecca’s delighted squeals.

I choose to find happiness every day in the little things, and I hope that by choosing happiness, I’m choosing fulfillment, too.


For the Choosing Happiness Group Writing Project—accepting submissions until midnight tonight!

Categories
Contests

GWP: Choosing Happiness Part II

Yet again, I must open with a birthday announcement: today Hayden is three years old! My big boy! And like his daddy, this year is his his golden birthday.

kids-december-2008-047small
Happy birthday!

Today we only have two more entries for the GWP, both of which are wonderful:

With only seven posts submitted right now, odds are the best ever for winning that $30 Amazon certificate! The contest is officially set to end today, but I could extend the deadline. When I’ve done this before, no one actually entered in the extended time, so does anyone want some extra time?

Categories
Fulfillment Contests

GWP: Choosing Happiness Part I

First off, I must begin today with a big HAPPY BIRTHDAY to Ryan. I won’t tell you how old he is, but I will say it’s his “golden birthday.” I envy anyone who can remember their (his/her, if you’re the grammar police) golden birthday, since I was two for mine.

Anyway. You’d think that choosing happiness would be easy. We all want to be happy, don’t we? And it would seem that realizing that being happy is a conscious choice and making that choice is the hardest part, wouldn’t it?

But it isn’t always. If it were, then everyone would be happy all the time, and obviously we’re not. The first five entries in the GWP highlight difficult times to be happy in and sometimes difficult decisions.

And for some variety, I’m going to add a few posts that I’ve come across that seemed to fit in with the theme:

Have you seen any posts around the blogosphere about choosing happiness?