In Pursuit of Lasting Results

I have a friend who refuses to iron more than one piece of clothing at a time. She believes that dying with a closet full of clean, pressed clothes would be testimony to a wasted life. Why bother ironing something you may never get the chance to wear?


"I"d much rather spend my time mowing the lawn," my friend confides. I assume she just enjoys being out in the fresh air and sunshine, but no, she explains, the reason she likes cutting the grass is because she knows it won't need to be cut again for a full week — or at least five or six days. Not so with any other domestic task.


You can knock yourself out scrubbing bathrooms, mopping floors, or washing windows, and the results can be completely undone in a matter of minutes. (And the more young children that share your household, the more likely your efforts to keep it clean will be thwarted.)


Even a home-cooked meal is summarily demolished once it's been brought to the table. No sooner do you wash and dry the last dish from lunch than your famished family is back in the kitchen, asking when they may expect dinner and begging for a snack.


But a freshly-mown lawn? Once that job's done, you can take a well-earned break and enjoy it for awhile. There is something very gratifying about that fact.


As a wife and mother, I must deal with an endless barrage of demands upon my time and energy, of which there is a very limited supply. If I do not choose wisely, I will end up squandering it to achieve results that are fleeting rather than investing it in something that will endure.  I want to make taking care of people, not possessions, my focus.


Of course, at some point, the laundry does have to be washed, the meals prepared, the floors swept. Life has always been a balancing act and always will be. The challenge is to tend to the temporal duties in such a way that we achieve lasting results. Not that the same chores won't have to be done all over again tomorrow, but that in the doing, we are training children, teaching teamwork, showing appreciation, offering encouragement, modeling diligence, radiating joy, building character, and making memories together.


That kind of time investment will yield results that endure.



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Published on March 27, 2011 07:26
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