New Year’s Resolution: Lose 20 pounds. Months 3-4.
I’ve been thinking a lot about patience. Before I became a mother, I knew that patience would likely be one of my biggest challenges once I had kids (that, and getting up early in the morning). And lo and behold, I was right! (A plus to having children in your 30s instead of in your bounce-back, energetic, can-get-no-sleep-and-still-function-just-fine-thank you very much 20s: you know yourself better).
There’s having patience with my kids, which some days is hard, and then there’s having patience with myself, which is often harder. When Elan melts down for the tenth time in a day, I do get impatient, but I also can look at his little turned-down sad face and feel empathy for how difficult life is feeling for him right now. Same for Emry.
But when I have a melt-down type of day myself, it’s difficult to muster the same sense of compassion for myself. And it’s even more challenging to feel compassion for myself when I don’t live up to the high standards and lofty goals I would like to meet, day in and day out. In a nutshell, I’m often too hard on myself (sound familiar?). So lately I’ve been thinking of patience as forgiving myself and others, over and over and over again. Many tiny little forgivings punctuating the course of my days. Because as annoying as it is when I forget to pay the credit card bill on time, it’s not worth beating myself up over. I’ve got bigger fish to fry. (Not to mention a stellar record of getting late fees waived as a “one-time special exemption.”)