If I were president of Procrastinators Anonymous, we would never get around to our first meeting.
I'm officially at a stage in my life when the list of chores, children's needs, and personal projects seems endless. Yet, I haven't learned that ignoring that list is not making it any shorter.
Home:
- Install quarter-rounds along the baseboards
- Paint the kitchen
- Install new moldings
- Finish the edging around the kitchen floor
- Gut the mudroom
- Attach stairs to the back patio door
- Replace the toilet in the basement
- Figure out why the forced-air humidifier unit is not functioning properly
- Update the rest if the household plugs
- Install a light in the T.V. room
- Redo the main floor bathroom
- etc…
Kids:
- Really? Does any parent need to explain what comprises a list of responsibilities towards your children?
Me:
- I used to run; I'd like to run more…
- I finished the first draft of a book: "Men Get Pregnant, Too; Despite Never Pushing a Watermelon Through a Pigeonhole" I'd like to see that through…
- This blog could use a dose of re-design and a scoop of salesmanship.
Did I mention my wife and I could use some alone time?
But, when I have "free" time – which I define as a period during which I have the opportunity to do absolutely nothing – I let it all slide.
What's the key to being a different kind of person? How do 'they' do it? I know 'they're' out there, 'Those People': they wake at 5am to run, they never watch T.V. (or so they say), they tackle at-home projects because, well, "They're not gonna get done by themselves!", they carpool their kids from event to event as though they were part of a speaking tour (hang on, I have to write that down…'look into getting involved in some sort of speaking tour'), and, just when you think that was impressive, you find out they volunteer helping the elderly.
There are words and expressions which could describe me; it really a question of which are apt, and which are exaggerations: lazy, selfish, worthy of a break, unmotivated, over-tasked, distracted….procrastinator?
I think there is some truth to it all. After all we are not only one thing, but rather the sum of many parts.
When I get home later, after the kids are in bed, I should: shower, shave, make my son's lunch, and get a suit ready for tomorrow. But, the Super Bowl is on…I'll probably watch the game and leave the rest for tomorrow morning, which will be a disaster.
Of course, I have a PVR, I could pause the game, complete my little to-do list, then catch-up with the Super Bowl by skipping the commercials…
You know what a solution is for my lassitude? I'm going to mark on the kitchen calendar tasks to be done on specific days: 3 days a week I'll go for a short jog – not too much, just enough to get the blood pumping; 3 days a week I'll write, either for the book, or the blog – not all day, just for a couple of hours; and 1 day a week will be dedicated to household renos – nothing major, just an hour or two to advance the project enough to feel a sense of accomplishment.
There we go; if it's on the calendar it will be harder not to follow through…I'll be sure to do that as soon as I get home today.
Or, at the very latest, tomorrow.

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