How long is your “happy gap”? A second?
A few precious minutes?
These days my happy gap is so much longer than it used to
be. I think it grew in direct proportion
to my age.
You’re probably asking what a “happy gap” actually is….well,
quite simply, it is those first few moments when you wake up in the morning,
open your eyes, and realize you have a whole new day ahead of you. For those first, few, beautiful moments of
consciousness, you have yet to focus on what lies ahead for your day…and in those
precious seconds you are blessed with naïve blissfulness. Then, Wham!
It hits you in the face. It's that little window of time between happiness and utter sadness, because suddenly the
reality sets in of what you have to do once your feet actually hit the floor. Take a shower, get the kids up, get them fed,
off to school, you off to work, pay the bills, clean the house, get to the
grocery store, make dinner, clean up, get everyone ready for bed…on and on the
list goes…it makes for a very short, happy gap…doesn’t it???
I am not the one who came up with the term, “happy
gap.” The honor of that phrase goes to
our good friend, Andy Andrews. He used
to use that term in his seminars, and I always loved it. I had such a clear picture of what he was
saying…because at the time we had two small children and not a lot of income
coming in. So, needless to say, our
happy gap was REALLY SHORT! We barely got our eyes open, and Wham!…happy
gap over and out.
As many of you know we chose to homeschool our two children,
so that meant we were surviving off of one income. We had the usual amount of debt…car payment,
mortgage, credit card bills, insurance…blah, blah, blah. You know the story. There was just soooo much to do back then,
and only so many hours in a day to get it all done. And I had the impression I was supposed to,
no, NEEDED TO, get it all done and do it
all really well. I wanted to do a good
job of educating the kids…I never wanted to worry that I might be making a
mistake schooling them at home…so that put a lot of stress on me daily. Plus…there were days when they made it very
difficult to stay on track…days when all they wanted to do was be
outside…enjoying nature…and let’s face it…so did I! So out we would go…and then we would have to
play catch up on our schoolwork on the weekends or throughout the summer. I was always one to want a clean home…all the
time. I used to always wonder who might
stop by at any given moment…and if that was going to happen, I wanted the house
to look nice. I always obsessed over a
tidy home. We managed to run up credit
card bills, feeling the need to own things that I cannot even remember what
they were to this day. Things that at
the time seemed vitally important to our survival, and now I doubt we still
have or even use on a daily basis. Worry,
worry, worry. Day in and day out. Would bill collectors call? Would the power be shut off? Would we have enough money to put gas in the
car to get Jerry to work and back? Would the house stay clean? Would there be food on the table and shoes on
our children’s feet. Oh the list of
worries. It was endless…so needless to
say…when I woke up, there not much of a happy gap to speak of.
Here’s the thing….
Here is why my happy gap is so much longer and stronger
these days.
Because I finally
figured out a thing or two. And I truly
think that the older I got the easier it was to see things more clearly. Here is what I learned…
1. If I
wanted to skip days or even a week of school time so that the kids and I could
experience our gorgeous beaches or our wonderful little zoo or take a long bike
ride or padoodle around on our scooters….well, that was fine. Because part of the beauty of homeschooling
IS that you can school whenever you darn well please. There are no teachers demanding assignments
be completed on a certain day and at a certain time…I decided when work was to
be completed. So what if we did school
at night when dad was home to help, or on the weekends when the rest of the
world was packing out the beaches? We
got to go on the weekdays…when no one was there. We often had the lovely Gulf Beaches all to ourselves.
2.
I can count on one hand the number of times that
someone would stop by my house unannounced…it hardly ever happened. So what the heck was all the fuss over about
keeping things perfect all the time? It
just didn’t seem all that important the older I got. Straightened up, yes…but perfect all the
time? No. And truth be told…I don’t think our friends
even noticed or cared if it was spotless or not…true friends came to see us…not
our house.
3.
I cut the credit cards in half and haven’t had
one since. We paid them off, and we
decided right then and there that if we couldn’t pay cash for it, we simply did
not need it. Oh what a day of
enlightenment that was for Jerry and me.
I swear that was the day our marriage became better, for both of
us. It took so much pressure off of us.
And you know what…the power never once got cut off. We never, for a single minute, went without
food on the table or gas in our tanks.
Not once did the kids face life shoeless or without the things that they
needed to lead a lovely childhood. Somehow,
there was always plenty. Month after
month we made it through with a little bit to spare. Sometimes very little…but a little was all we
needed to face another month with confidence that God was, indeed, going to
provide for our needs. So what if there
were entire years that we went without cable tv…I now look at those days as
blessings…because we did more as a family.
Hours of sitting on the floor with Hot Wheels with the kids…or just coloring
in their coloring books with them. Oh, I
have such wonderful memories of those years.
And honestly, if I could eliminate all of the computers, cell phones,
ipods, and all the other electronic junk that clutters our daily lives, and go
back to those days of sitting on the floor coloring, I would do it in a
heartbeat.
So, these days when I wake up, my “happy gap” lasts a good
long time. It lasts long past the moment
I climb out of bed and start my morning routine. It lasts right up until the time I have to
get Glenn out of bed…because that girl in the morning is nothing if not
impossible to wake up!!! But that’s ok…because
guess what??? I’m even learning not to
let that get under my skin too much…because if I can just find a way to cope
with that, than I can extend my happy gap even a little bit longer…
Let go of your worry, friends. It’s yours to let go of. No one else owns it. Let go…It will make all the difference in the
world when it comes to your own personal “happy gap.” And my wish for you today is that as you go
through life, you don’t wait too long to find some peace with your situation,
so that you can wake up and feel how great it is just to be alive and how
blessed you are to have another day in front of you. Your
extended happy gap is there for the taking. So
tomorrow morning, wake up and time your happy gap. Figure out just how long it is before you let
the negative in…and once you have made the decision to not let the negative in…your
whole day can be one long happy gap. And
wouldn’t that be a beautiful thing?
Love it. I have always admired you and Jerry for how you handle your lives, children, and people you have let into your lives. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteCredit cards are the Devil.. I will never have them again! Skylar is impossible to get up also.. :) I love reading your blogs. Your whole family makes me Happy :)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Mark and Dannell, for taking the time to read my latest ramblings and to leave comments. You both have families filled with love, as well, and I think that is why you relate to my little blog posts. Family is why we are here. You are also part of our family...our precious family of friends. Love and hugs to you both:-)
ReplyDeleteGood job Kat!! Moving to Florida has opened my happy gap!
ReplyDeleteThis is Kathy :-)
Kacky!!! So sweet of you to read my silly nonsense...it's been fun putting down my random thoughts and having a place to put them! You should start a "life in Miami" blog! I'd promise to read it and love it!!! Hugs...
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