Friday, October 26, 2018

My Official Political Stance

Sometimes I read the news or friends’ statuses on Facebook and wonder why there seems to be such a disconnect between what people say...and what they mean....or what they do.

I am not a very political person. Politics bother me because invariably the rhetoric is empty and poor logic is found. I have a great love for logic. I need the world to make sense. When I have commented on politics, it has always been from this need. This desire to understand. After all, the philosopher states that the nature of Man is to know. On occasion, I will read a particularly heinous example of poor logic and I am almost compelled to comment.

Facebook had me pegged as very conservative. Politically, I am not very conservative. Personally, I wouldn’t say conservative. I live a simple, minimalist, and happy life.  I am a moderate. I believe in appropriate and swift penalties for breaking the law, but I think governments should stay out of personal lives. I think that true socialism is unsustainable, but I hold entities, such as Medicaid and Financial Assistance, as necessary. I value the success of capitalism, but I believe the successful should share their success through their generosity. I am very moderate in most things. Why? Because I am not a “conservative”. I am a conservationist - I believe in building foundations first, but applying interventions if necessary.

The second thing that gets me to comment is disrespect or disregard for life. I am a conservationist. My educational background is biology. I am also a Catholic and I believe in the sanctity of human life. It makes my blood boil when I see a disregard for the state of the environment. I loathe the aftermath of protests because of all the trash left behind. It makes me sick to hear of unnecessary loss of life for animals and habitats. Ecosystems are vital to survival. And it deeply wounds my heart when I hear or read of the disrespect of persons.

Race, creed, birth status (born or developing), citizenship, immigration status, job, socioeconomic background, education, mental health, physical health, birth defects, etc. - these all deserve respect. By their very nature, they deserve respect. They deserve the chance of happiness. They deserve dignity. The tiniest fetus. The oldest person in the world. The brilliant mathematician. The disabled adolescent. They deserve respect.

I am an advocate. I give back. I do not judge. I care about the world and everything and everyone in it. My official political position is this: Who can judge the value of life?


Thursday, October 25, 2018

What Inspires You?


Sometimes one must gaze out into the world and wonder. 
Sometimes wonder brings action. 
Sometimes wonder beckons contentment.

Inspiration is the movement of the soul. 
Contentment is the rest of the soul. 

Are you content today? 
Or, are you inspired? 

What contents you? 
What inspires you?

Saturday, October 20, 2018

Lazy Day Motivation

Some days we are ready to take on the world. Other days, we lie in pretend. And, then some days, we barely move. Instead of letting life drift on by on lazy days, set yourself up for success. Plan for success. 

How do you become motivated? 

1) Decide 1, 2, or 3 things you want to accomplish on your lazy day. 
Do you want finish the laundry? Do the shopping? Clean the bathroom? Do some reading? Decide what you want accomplished. 

2) Break down hopefully accomplishments into bite-sized tasks. 
If you neee to clean the bathroom, you could say: surfaces, linens, trash, floors. This breaks it down into manageable tasks. Have these tasks be something which will be an accomplishment, not extra work. (If your goal is cleaning the garage, moving everything to the yard is not a good task). 

3) Set a timer. 
Set a timer and see how many tasks you can complete in 5 or 10 minutes. Some might even suggest 8 minutes. 

4) When the time is up, decide: continue or break? 
Take breaks and rest often on lazy days. Your body might need the reprieve. 

5) Pat yourself on the back. You did it.

Friday, October 19, 2018

There is nothing more majestic than realizing your own strength. 

Do I have to have a routine?

Routine. Such a decisive word. According to research referenced in the book, "How to Improve your Marriage Without Talking About It," by Patricia Love and Steven Stonsy, men tend to thrive with routine while women don't really care about routine one way or another.

So, routine. What do I think of routines?

Honestly, I hate them. My husband and children live by them. If it wasn't for my children (and husband), I would probably spend most of my time reading.  Or writing. Or dreaming.  That's not to say that I don't do these things.

So...they are a necessary evil for a work-from-home, self-motivated person. That's right - if you want to work from home, you have to have a routine. If you do not have a routine, you will not succeed.

What does my morning routine look like when I am at my peak?

0445 - Wake up and check the time. Groan that the night is almost over.  Reset alarm from 5:00 am to 5:05 am. Check if assigned ESL courses.

0500 - Wake up and turn of alarm. Resetting the alarm was a waste of valuable sleep time.  Put baby back in the crib. Wonder how the baby ended up spending the night in bed again. Oh yeah. That 2 am feeding.

0505 - Go to restroom and wash face. 

0506 - Put on the kettle to make coffee and power up the computer. Sign into website to teach ESL.

0507 -  Do a morning stretch routine. I like this one.

0525 - Put on uniform shirt. Finish making coffee. Enter courseroom for ESL instruction. Practice speaking and smiling. Review lessons.

0530 - Teach ESL courses.

0645 - While teaching ESL, hear toddlers start to stir.

0725 - Finish teaching ESL. Rescue toddlers from room. Make breakfast.

0745 - Clean up from breakfast.

0800 - Check emails. Check agenda for day. Determine goals. Rescue Infant from Crib
This is, again, at my peak.  Sometimes, this routine goes out of the window.  Sometimes I don't sign up to teach and I sleep until my kids are knocking on their doors.  But, when it works, it works well.

Tip #1: Be Reasonable and Consistent.


Determine what important things you have to do every single day. Decide when you should do them. Be generous with yourself at first.  If you think it will take 25 minutes to wake up, give yourself an extra five minutes to make sure it happens.  But, aim to be up at the same time every day.

By deciding the tasks which must be done daily and determine what time you need to have them done, you set yourself up for success.  Little successes will lead to big successes. That doesn't mean it has to be a strict routine that cannot change.

Tip #2: An Inflexible Routine is the enemy.


If your routine is so inflexible that you cannot be sick or sleep-in on rare occasions. That you cannot have a bad day. That you cannot move things around. If you have an inflexible routine, you will always feel behind.

Tip #3: Identify the Non-negotiable and the "Well, I would like to..." goals.


Look at my routine, partly written in jest, above.  The only things with inflexible times are the ESL courses.  Everything else is molded around those.  So, if I wake up late, I might not stretch.  Or, I might forget to put the coffee on.  Neither is a huge problem.

"Pretend" and the Sad Lack of Imagination

       A few years ago, I worked as a teaching assistant at a small private school.  Periodically, I was asked to go into the Preschool or t...