Wednesday, May 26, 2010

3 Jewels In My Crown Welcomes Erin from Apples with Honey

Today I'd like to introduce you to my very first guest blogger!

Erin Ellenberger-March is a talented artisan and fellow blogger.  Erin has several loves in her life that she shares with her readers over at Apples With Honey
Erin plays the role of Mommy to a precious little girl named Poppy.  You have to check out her pics of Poppy to see how completely adorable she is!  Erin is also expecting her second baby in September.
She previously entertianed a career as a Dental Hygenist but has since decided to become a STAHM/WAHM after the birth of Poppy. She is one of the most talented creative writers that I've encountered in a long time and has recently taken a stab at freelance writing. To earn extra income she sells her handmade pieces such as beautiful photography prints, earrings, metal stamped jewellery, glass pendants and silk screen items. You'll also be able to find her handmade items at the Bobcaygeon Farmer's Market starting June 12, 2010. I'd like to personally welcome Erin to Three Jewels In My Crown.


Seeing The Everyday

Our lives are the sum
Of each moment and interaction.

Each day we work, eat, laugh, teach, play, read, remember...
And work at it all again the next day.

Within seemingly small moments we find opportunity
To build relationships, develop character, find joy
For the price of our time

Life's most essential possibilities are realized at home


Where we share, teach, grow, learn, serve, give
Our best without praise or fanfare.


Because every effort, every moment matters
In development of a person.


Nothing is really routine.
To all who see the everyday. ~Seeing The Everyday Magazine~

I easily find serenity in the wind and scents of hanging fresh laundry on my beloved clothesline. Nestling into wind and sun soaked sheets on an early summer evening is one of life’s great decadences. I understand the happiness of dirty hands, a sweaty brow and sun-warmed shoulders while working in the garden. To sit sipping cold tea with tanned hands after a cool shower and look out at what you have done is a simple thrill. To swipe away fingerprints and nose prints from the windows so the sun can reach just a tiny bit further across the floor and touch my cold toes in the morning is a good thing. Sometimes, when the mood strikes I even enjoy the hiss of a hot steamy iron smoothing away the creases in linens and work shirts as if by magic.

One chore I do not love is that of washing dishes. There is just something that seems so cruel and relentless about it. I have been known to have standoffs with a sink full of dishes that last days. The tidy person inside of me always surrenders and dips her hands into the hot water and reluctantly opens the mysterious lunch containers to be cleaned. Just as I am about to raise my arms in victory of completion, I spy a tossed aside sippy-cup under the table or a lone glass on the nightstand and so the cycle goes; no time for celebration.

Or is that necessarily true? As a stay at home mama trying to keep her nest in happy order I am trying to change my perspective on the everyday duties that are required of me. In a sense, to be resentful is to be ungrateful, not to mention to fight a losing and very tiring battle. I have always felt a stir in the pit of my stomach when I read the quote “Be happy for this moment, for this moment is your life.” After years of looking at these words they have finally taken root and challenged me to change something about my behaviour.


On good days I try to be aware, as I sort through sticky forks and knives and oatmeal-cemented bowls, of the constant flow of life. I remind myself that by resenting the constant cycle of doing and un-doing, I am resenting the natural flow and energy that is in everything we do. The day begins and ends. The sun rises and sets. We sleep and we awaken. Each day is the same until we focus on something either brilliant and brave or tedious and mundane; a picnic under the tree or a sink full of dishes.

Rather than resenting the tedious tasks of our nests, perhaps we can focus on the slow rhythm of sorting, the soothing sensation of soapy water on tired hands, and the shiny gem of a just washed glass. Perhaps we can take a moment to think of the stories and lives behind each tea cup and handmade mug that passes through the suds. Be grateful for the opportunity to be utterly present and still in a moment of gratitude for everything we have and can do.

We can’t have the picnics under the tree without the clean dishes nor can we have the picnics without making more dirty ones. To accept that inevitable truth will only make life more enjoyable.
I will tell you I am no saint and have moments of sheer exhaustion as I watch a pink clad Poppy as she spins and sings at the top of her lungs and sprinkles dog food on a floor I just swept or paints a milk picture on a floor I just mopped. But I am learning and transitioning into a different way of thinking and these things take time. Be patient with yourself. Be kind to the makers of messes, for they are the teachers. Take a deep breath and begin again without resentment. Think long and hard about changing even the slightest thing about your life without first considering how it might change the rest of it.


go gently & be wonderful

e.






 





1 comments:

Crystal said...

Your talent for written script is inexplicable! I'm so glad to hear you've entered into freelance writing. Thanks for your wonderful post today!