Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Starting my resolutions a month early...

It's December and the New Year is upon us. I find that the New Year is a time when lots of people say things that they don't really mean or aren't that motivated to do and call them resolutions:

- This is the year I'm going to exercise regularly and eat right
- I'm going to do better at work so I can be promoted
- I'm going to show my spouse I appreciate them more
- I'm going to travel the world!

I've never really been one for making resolutions, but this year I have to make an exception. It hit me Monday, December 1st, that I had the opportunity to set my resolutions now (they say it takes 21 -30 days to form a habit), so I can carry them through 2009. I was really excited about the prospect of making real change in my life, and I wanted it to be meaningful. I'd planned to write about personal reflection last week, but instead I think it makes since to think about my 2009 resolutions with respect to myself and what I want to change in my life.

What I'm hoping is that by blogging my resolutions, I am creating accountability for myself. I'm hoping some of you will call me to task if I slip. This is my way of being open and somewhat vulnerable (novel right)... Anyway, here we go:


Personal Reflection 1:

I'm good when I'm good and bad when I'm bad. At my best, I'm fun-seeking and loving, I'm productive, I beam with joy, I'm healthy, some might say I'm pretty awesome and I can make others smile. At my worst I'm grumpy, aloof, cold, sharp-tongued and can make others unhappy. My mood fluctuates more than I like; they are more impacted by people and situations that I really care about or how I happen to feel about myself on a particular day.

Some of this is because I need to be centered. When I feel unsettled, I tend to be more sensitive. Some of this is self-doubt. Some of this is a lack of creative and physical outlets. Some of this is due to having relationships with people that don't add value to my life. Everyone's heard that people come into your life for a reason, a season or a lifetime. At times I think I try to convert Reasons into Seasons, and Season's into Lifetimes.

Personal Reflection 2:

Part of my feeling unsettled is self-inflicted. I've chosen not to get comfortable with things like my job(s) and living arrangements. As a result, I don't fully accept being "there", I hold things back, I never make the spaces my own and I'm somewhat disorganized. Settled looks a certain way to me. It was the career that I enjoyed and paid well. It was the family and the house that I bought with my husband. It meant I was where I would be for a significant period of time.

I'm not sure when that happened. In high school I loved my job at Baskin Robbins and didn't hold back anything. I was rewarded with customer tips and increased responsibilities at a really young age. In college I painted designs on the walls of my dorm room, even though I knew I'd have to repaint them white every April. I had pictures everywhere, a small rug, and lot's of little things that screamed Lanie! In Rochester I went through periods of doing this, and back in Baltimore it's been slim to none.

Personal Reflection 3:

As important as relationships and communication are to me in theory, I still don't consider myself that good in practice. I love my family, they mean so much to me, but I don't necessarily show them or communicate that as much as I should. I've said in the past that they could reach out too, but I recognize if it's something I want, then it's something I must do. The same goes with friends, and sorors. I'm not a big phone person which limits some potential friendships, and even though I'm compassionate, I'm not always thoughtful. My brain doesn't naturally keep details about what's going on in peoples lives and remind me to ask about them later. Someone can talk to me for 15 minutes about something important to them, and while I give feedback and support at the time, the next day or week, I don't think to ask. I'll either remember way late, or hear someone else ask, and then I feel like an arse.

Personal Reflection 4:

I ignore some of the basics that a woman like me probably needs to embrace. I'm not the neatest, I don't cook regularly, I don't consistently partake in hobbies or hang with girlfriends and I don't pay that much attention to how I look on any particular day. Why would a "woman like me" want to embrace these things? Because one day I'd like to get married, and as much as a lot of us single ladies hate to admit it, they're important.

Yeah I can clean... but it's not my favorite thing, and I tend to take a long time so called "doing it right." Yeah I can cook... no really, I can, but I usually don't opting for something quick or letting my mom do the cooking. Yes, there are things I love to do; play sports, paint, write, dance.. but I haven't gotten back to do any of those things regularly. Girlfriends are important. I'll leave it at that. And how you look is important. I use lack of time as an excuse for not doing all of these things, and for what I want, that's really unacceptable.

Personal Reflection 5:

KNOW GOD. I'd leave it there with a "nuff said," but just to elaborate, I do have a relationship with God, but I need and want it to be much stronger. It's the key to having success in dealing with anything I've already mentioned and everything that I haven't.

- - -

Resolution 1:

I will take part in some type of physical activity each week (hit the gym, go out dancing, join a sports league.. something!)

Resolution 2:

I will do something creative once a month (paint and finish a picture, read a book, sew something I designed etc)

Resolution 3:

I will separate myself from people and situations that don't bring out the best in me ("Reasons and Seasons" past their time, doing things that aren't really necessary that don't make me happy, etc)

Resolution 4:

I will decorate my office and my room in a way that reflects me by February.

Resolution 5:

I will use my Franklin Covey daily to account for work schedules and information, design standard templates for myself at work, and use them.

Resolution 6:

I will add birthdays and schedule calls and visits with family and friends in my Franklin Covey and stick to it! If necessary, I will also record key notes to follow up on. (sounds contrived, but I have to start somewhere)

Resolution 7:

I will effectively communicate my thoughts and feelings, both good and bad, with controlled emotion and understanding of the perspective of others.

Resolution 8:

I will domesticate myself (to a degree). I will cook at least one dinner meal per week with a goal of 2 per week by June 2009 and 3 per week by December 2009. (Sounds easy but class twice a week until 10pm is serious) Serious house cleaning will be done once per month with daily and weekly upkeep (unprompted by guests) as appropriate (laundry, bathrooms, dishes etc)

Resolution 9:

I will pull out what I'm wearing the night before, and take the time to notice the details each day.

Resolution 10:

Spiritual Growth: Find a church home by February 2009 that really is a good fit. Identify and embrace spiritual mentors and interact with them at least on a weekly basis. Testify.

- - -

It's a little overwhelming, but into the 3rd day of December, I've already started working on some of my resolutions. Some of them will definitely put me to the test, but I have faith that I can do what I've set out to do. Wish me luck and support is always welcomed.

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3 comments:

Anonymous said...

It must be an age or stage in life thing. I concur on all of your reflections. I've probably thought about making adjustments in my life that align will all five of them. As 2009 draws near I am thinking more and more about the end of my 20s. I need to make some changes to better position myself to enter my 30s.

TheRightQuestions said...

My darling niece—I love you madly and I understand that you are indeed so accomplished because you are such a perfectionist. But here’s why I’m not completely comfortable with this set of 10 resolutions. First, let’s do the math: the gym or a league @ 8-24 hrs/mo; creative @ 2-4 hrs/mo; checking Covey boxes & making forms @ 20 hrs/mo; mandatory phone calls @ 2 hrs/mo; domestication parts 1 thru 4 equals 28-40 hrs/mo; nightly accessorization @ 5 hrs/mo; church @ 12 hrs/mo.

Before posting a brand new position in the workplace, we would construct a “labor matrix” to ensure the duties we had in mind were actually doable by one person in a standard work week. By my count, your resolutions add 77 to 107 hours per month of new tasks to your life, better known as 2 to 2-1/2 standard work weeks. I didn’t see where you were purging 2 weeks of work or school or other current obligations to keep yourself in balance.

I’m being snippy (and it’s meant to make you laugh) to make a point. I hope you never stop striving to give more, to be better, to reach higher. That’s what’s in you. But I don’t want to see you walking into the “female trap” where we’re never quite perfect enough. “If my jewelry was right, they’d notice me.” “If I cooked more, he’d marry me.” Bah, humbug. If my jewelry was right every day, they’d think I didn’t need a raise. If I cooked more, he might mistake me for his mama, and I am not interviewing for that job.

From my very biased perspective, you are absolutely the perfect Alana. There’s only one. Only supposed to be one. Do YOU, not Penelope Perfect. And if you keep your perfection urge in balance, next year you will be in a position to celebrate your resolution success, not beat yourself up about failure.

But I do hope you have room to add a Resolution #11 just for me. Never forget in any set of resolutions, you must acknowledge just how fantastic you already are.

Resolution 11-- Every single morning in the shower, repeat aloud these words from Jayne Relaford Brown’s poem “Finding Her Here”:
I find her becoming,
this woman I've wanted,
who knows she'll encompass,
who knows she's sufficient,
knows where she's going
and travels with passion.
Who remembers she's precious,
but knows she's not scarce-
who knows she is plenty,
plenty to share.

Love you!

Lanie said...

Aunt K,

I appreciate your concern and thoughtfulness. I know you are right to a great extent. What I'm hoping to accomplish with my resolutions is increased efficiency in the things that I already do, so that I can include more things that I'd like to do.

I also want to give you some comfort in knowing that none of the things I'm suggesting are to convince anyone to marry me. I guess I always held ideals in my head of the type of wife and mother I'd like to be. The type of household I wanted to live in. I'm thinking that I can start creating that house now, and when the right person comes along and asks for my hand, then it will be ready for us to move in with a few less adjustments to be made.

I have so much respect and love for you, and I learn more than you know by observing you and hearing stories about you (some people in the family like to talk). Hopefully as I get things together, I'll be able to come down more. Love you!


Kal.... I'm so happy that you take the time to read. We are going to be just fine as we approach 30. Hope to see you soon, maybe Saturday?