“I’ve got nothing to do, Mum,” Cappers said, approximately 57 seconds after arriving home from a two-night school excursion.
“Why don’t you just sit on the front verandah and watch the evening fall?” I suggested gently, fighting the urge to launch into a “kids today can’t amuse themselves for one second” lecture. Her face fell; watching the world darken is hardly the stuff 10 year old dreams are made of, but off she went. She was out there, barely visible against the darkening sky, until I called her in for dinner.
“The end of the day is a very thoughtful time,” she observed.
I’ve realised lately how productive I am making my kids. How productive I am making myself. It’s been a long time since I’ve sat on my front verandah, watching the day surrender. Twilight has always been my favourite time of day; my memory is filled with golden-hued scenes, glistening in their richness. These days I often don’t even notice it’s dark outside.
I realise that, just like my kids, I’m caught in an endless cycle of doing. I feel restless if I’m not engaged in something that feels productive – whether that’s a work task or a parenting moment, or simply learning something new. For a long time I was at a point where I couldn’t even settle into a novel because it wasn’t doing enough. Reading novels felt like wasted time, when there was so much that was ‘real’ to read and learn elsewhere.
Novels exist in the being, not the doing. From time to time I forget how truly important they are.
Doing is noisy. It echoes in my brains like a relentless drum, impossible to still. A boom, boom, boom for my doing, doing doing. I can’t switch it off to sleep, often I can barely hear other people over its repetitive noise and sometimes I can’t even quieten it to hear my own thoughts. My need to keep busy, to do things well, to seek and then strive, is making my head hurt and my body stressed. Even when I allow myself ‘down time’ I am doing something: trying to practise mindfulness, learning a hobby, reading up on something I’m interested in, making lists for what happens next.
I was at a major shopping centre recently, stuck behind a family that appeared to have all the time in the world to amble around the mall with the snails. “Hurry uuuuuup, some of us have things to dooooo” I was thinking, edging this way and that to try and get around them. The minute I squeezed past them, all bustle and busyness, was the minute a single, crystal-clear note cut through my booming drum: “It’s me with the problem, not them.”
I panicked a little when I realised how caught up in doing I really am. I have always considered myself to be a seeker, not a striver, but constant curiosity is its own kind of doing and my brain needs a break so badly. I scoured the web to find ways to stop the doing and start simply being again and here are the three things I’m undoing immediately:
- Take time to listen myself: Whenever I’ve tried to practise mindfulness, I’ve never quite made it. It has always felt like a chore – not the mind-wandering part, just the focusing on my (boring) breath and bringing-the-thoughts back to X part. I’ve realised that focusing my mind is just never going to happen for me. So I will simply try allowing my thoughts to go where they please, but really noticing them. Taking the time to listen to myself. I will do this over my morning cup of tea, enjoying it on my beloved front verandah instead of at my desk.
- Make yoga a daily habit: I often forget to make yoga (which I have loved for years) a daily habit. My ‘all or nothing’ tendencies come crying out, insisting that five minutes of anything won’t do any good. Well, it will do a lot of good. I’m going to learn this sequence and practise it every single day (though at bedtime, not in the morning… will that be a bad thing, yogis?)
- Cut down on screens: This. If I do nothing else, I need to do this. I spend all day on my computer, beavering away for work. Once the work day is done, I’m off for a few hours, but then I will often get back on in the evening – to work some more (often into the wee hours right before I got to bed) or to read (internet, magazines, books – they are all there, aren’t they?) or play (hello Facebook). Sometimes I double-screen, working on social media while I watch a TV show. I need to practise what I preach for my kids – screen freedom. A little bit of screen time, but not the whole time and definitely not in the couple of hours before bed.
My three pledges for being more and doing less. My three tickets out of the endless doing cycle. With a little bit of luck, these three new habits might help me break my bad habit of productivity. I’ve said it many times and need to remind myself now: what are we busy about?
Do you remember how to just be?
Kez @Awesomely Unprepared says
Oh yes. I need to do less. Mentally, anyway. I recently started working from home more and I am learning the struggle of trying to make a clear distinction between down time and work time. I kind of blame my lack of a finished home office (where I plan on being based out of for certain hours and the door can be shut to signify work time etc) but I know I can put down better habits to become a bit more zen before then.
Maxabella says
I found it hard to adjust to working from home too, Kez. It’s been four years now and I’ve totally found my groove, but it was definitely a struggle. I have learned to block out the crazy and just focus on the task at hand!
JF Gibson says
I’m really mindful of taking moments out of the day to just be. Even if it’s just three minutes to stare out the window, or lie on the floor. This time of year though, it’s tough to try and be, and not do.
Oh and yes, my favourite times of the day are twilight, morning and night. x
Maxabella says
I honestly don’t think I am capable of staring into space anymore. How sad is that?
Robyna | the Mummy and the Minx says
I’m the same, although I do make time to read every evening. It’s so hard to sit with stillness when it feels like there is always a pressing burden of stuff to do. Yet, I never regret the time I spend on “nothing” and it often leads to more productive hours thereafter.
Maxabella says
I’m back to reading. I was kinda banned for a while there because I have a tendency to get really into a good book and forget I have a life. So, there is my ‘down time’ and the reason I can’t read novels too often lately.
Sarah @sarahdipity says
I can so relate to this! I took long service leave from work this year and it’s really made me realise that I have a serious problem with just ‘being’ I always have to be ‘doing’ and more than that, doing a hundred things at once!
Maxabella says
I wonder if we are fixable? I do think it’s a sign of the times. I have gotten to the point where I am envious of people sitting on park benches, doing nothing much at all.
Helen K says
Last week away was a revelation – the contrast to normal life really stood out. Trying to learn from that now – slowing down is good x
Eliza says
Oh my goodness yes! The bit about novels not being real enough. What is going on with us? Love your suggestions. Also Nicole Avery’s podcast on 11 things she doesn’t do was great. It got me thinking about what I should stop doing. Thanks for reminding me to really focus on it.