Everywhere I turn these days, someone is talking about Tidying Up with Marie Kondo. The first time this happened was in 2014 when Marie Kondo’s infamous book hit shelves and the Minimalist podcast captured the imagination of a country whose citizens love their stuff. 

In the grocery store line I’d overhear roommates and partners jokingly ask each other, “But does this extra large flat of toilet paper spark joy?” At IKEA, I’d watch as people pulled meticulously folded garments out of their backpacks to see if they fit properly in drawer organizers. Now that the Netflix Original series is out, it’s happening all over again.

I understand the wish to lighten one’s load, to spend less energy on stuff and more on experiences and life and people. The concept of clean, uncluttered spaces appeals to most of us. If our environs are calm, perhaps our hearts and minds will feel the same. The problem is, geography and environment can only moderate our insides to a point. 

In a time when the competition for our attention is constant, it makes sense to me that the glimmer of hope provided by “fail-proof” de-cluttering strategy is sweeping the nation. It appeals to our sensibilities. Removing extraneous objects, focusing on joy and gratitude and walking away with a physical space that feels less busy are all things that we can DO. 

We fill bags for donation and drop them off. We rearrange our display shelves and leave large gaps on our walls and in our closets that demonstrate what we’ve accomplished. It all feels great.

It’s much harder to do the work of tidying up our minds and hearts. Clutter that lives there, in the intra-psychic world, is much more difficult to sort. Certainly negative self-talk and painful memories do not bring us joy and we can’t, in good faith, express gratitude to our obsessive worry and tireless rumination. There’s no container large enough for our persistent hyper vigilance or our certainty that there’s an email, podcast, episode, Slack stream or text we have missed and no charitable donation center to bring these things to.

I often say that there is no longer a distinction between our “real lives” and our “digital lives.” Given that we spend a bulk of our day amassing experiences in digital domains, that this investment impacts our physiological, emotional and relational well being and that the constant activity there permeates every part of our being leads me to believe that a tidying up movement for our real-digital (mashup intentional) lives is in order.

I can just imagine what this might look like as a sketch comedy piece. A tiny energetic sparkly being enters the subject on an inhale, soaring in through the nostril and arriving at the center of the internal body to say, in a pixie, yet soothing, voice, “Let’s express gratitude for this bag of skin that carries you around. No. Really. Let’s do it. Breathe in and Out saying ‘thank you’ to your body.” 

Floating up toward the brain the voice would instruct, “Now let’s take everything from every region of this organ and push it toward the center to be sorted. With each memory or thought you come across, touch it, hold it, ask yourself if it brings you joy. If it does, find a home for it. If it doesn’t, get rid of it.”

In the sketch, that pile would be filled with old failed tests, heartbreaks, big wins, big fears and persistent niggling worries. The subject, inspired by the dulcet tones and cheerful encouragement would hold each item, bidding the weighty farewell with gratitude and organizing the remaining items with precision and care.

If only this were doable. (Trust me. I wish it were. I have immense respect for Marie Kondo.) Instead, the constant, loud, competitive clutter in our hearts and minds drives us forward (or plunges us backward) largely out of our conscious awareness. 

An email reminds us of a task we’ve forgotten so we dive in only to be interrupted, a few seconds later, by a text pointing our attention to a different task that feels equally as important. In the midst of our multitasking we catch sight of a notification about a breaking story and click on the link. While skimming the story we are notified that a package has been delivered and, while walking to retrieve it we are reminded that the other package we expected yesterday, never came. We follow the links to track that package, arrive back at our desk, open the padded envelope we’ve just received and have no idea where this whole train of action began. This expression of our cluttered internal worlds happens over and over every day and is fed by our constant connection to our devices and the digitally over stuffed offerings they provide.

In a recent poll, Common Sense Media found that 50 percent of adolescents feel addicted to their devices; 27 percent of parents feel the same. Even for those who may not identify with the feeling of dependence that addiction assumes, the average American is spending 10 plus hours a day with screens. This kind of engagement with the ever expanding access to data, ideas and experiences online is bound to create clutter—much of it unnecessary and, some of it, downright harmful.

In order to be healthy we need an ability to be both stimulated and soothed. We need to be able to be productive and, then, to let rest restore us. We need to be able to both DO and BE. 

I feel that we are seriously neglecting the soothing, resting and being parts of these balancing forces. It’s time that we challenge the notions that an over-active mind is the best mind and that always being busy is the highest valued way of being in the world It’s time that we learn to step away from devices, at least some of the time, in order to practice boredom tolerance, which is related to higher levels of creativity; focus on one thing at a time, which improves depth of performance; and the ability to delay gratification, which simply makes us more satisfied humans. It’s time to take seriously the impact of mental and emotional clutter and to devise plans for a cleaning out. 

5 Easy Steps for De-Cluttering the Mind

  1. Identify a 10-minute block of time that you can commit—daily—to spending on this process. Set an alarm on your phone to remind you.
  2. When the alarm goes, off take as little time as necessary to stop what you are doing. Imagine that you are closing a book. Put a bookmark where you are stopping, close the book and turn your attention toward simply being.
  3. Find a focal point. This need not be visual. It can be a sound, a smell, a physical sensation, a taste or an image. Whatever it is, try to have it be something neutral. Clouds, a calming essential oil blend, a handful of putty, the taste and temperature of water or the feeling and sound of a singing bowl would work well. Whatever your focal point, fix your attention on this in such a way that it forces other stimuli (from within or without) out of the frame of your consciousness.
  4. Once you are settled, enjoy the focus as fully as possible. When competing stimuli arise, notice them, then imagine reaching out and placing them in the book along with your bookmark. You’ll return to them when you’re done being. As quickly as possible, return your focus to your focal point.
  5. Repeat.

Does this spark joy for you now? I hope it does.

Doreen Dodgen-Magee
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

doreen dodgen-magee is a psychologist, author, & speaker who thinks about how technology is shaping people. Her book, Deviced! Balancing Life & Technology in a Digital Age was awarded the 2018 Gold Nautilus Award for Psychology & has been featured in the New York Times, Time Magazine, & the Washington Post. 

We all know the mantra: eat better, move more. But as busy moms, it can be hard to find time to get to a gym or to squeeze in a full-blown workout. We have diapers to change, meals to prepare, children to care for, laundry to fold, and maybe even another job at—or outside of—the home! We have to find ways to sneak in exercise into our day.

When we introduced our second child into the family, life majorly changed for our family—and, if I had any hope of getting a workout in, it would have to be at home. There was no way I’d be able to rally both kids (and all of their stuff) to the gym for a sweat sesh. 

And now, three years later, the story hasn’t changed: Home is still the primary location for my workout routines. But of course, even that can be a challenge. 

Here are some ways we try to make it work:

1. Include Your Child

A simple way to sneak in exercise is by just including your child in your routine! Rather than trying to find pockets of “free time” where your little one might be napping or blissfully distracted, just include them! This is the best tip in rocking a workout for busy moms! And if your baby is small enough, you can even use them for some weighted exercises.  

Otherwise, your bigger kids love to see what mommy is up to! My 6-year-old is all about the cardio routines. She will jump and workout right alongside me. And, while my little man isn’t quite as invested, he really likes to climb on me! So that extra body weight sure adds a challenge to my planks and push-ups!  

Also, including the two of them has helped a lot with my self-imposed “mom guilt”. Instead of feeling pressured to find a perfect section of time where everyone is occupied and happy, we know going into the workout that the whole family will be involved!

2. Break Up Your Workouts into Smaller Chunks

There is nothing wrong with splitting up 30 minutes of exercise into 10-minute increments. Do what you can, when you can. Maybe that looks like sneaking in a 10-minute morning ab-session and then a 20-minute walk in the afternoon. Or maybe you can rock a bunch of 5-minute dance parties throughout your day. You have to use your time the way that works for you.

So often we say, “Oh, I can’t find time for a 30-minutes right now.” So we don’t do anything, but the truth is, there are options for a workout for busy moms! Something is better than nothing. So, do what you can!

3. Take it Outside

Often, kids feel happy and contented when they’re outside and in nature, so strap those babies into their stroller and head outside! You can take the family for a walk—or even invest in an awesome jogging stroller, if you’re up for the challenge. No matter how you get outside, have your bigger kids take a notebook and a pencil to keep track of everything they see during their walk. This helps keep them engaged and they’ll feel like real nature detectives while you get your groove on.

4. Wake Up Before the Rest of Your Family

I know, nobody wants to talk about setting an alarm before you absolutely have to, but if your family is on a pretty reliable schedule, get yourself up 45 minutes earlier than the rest of them. This is a no-brainer when it comes to finding a way to workout for busy moms. You can throw on your joggers and squeeze in a great sweat session before anyone else starts to stir. If you’re lucky, you might even be able to sneak in a shower or a cup of coffee before they know you’re awake!

There’s something to be said for getting your workout done before any of your other obligations come into play. But don’t ask me about that; it’s been years since my kids have slept past 6:00 a.m.

5. Do What You Love

Maybe a life lesson here? Find the exercise that you actually enjoy doing, and do that one all the time. If you can figure out a balanced routine with cardio and weights, that would be the absolute best choice, but any movement counts.

With the onslaught of technology today, you can find at-home workouts for all types of interests. Find what works for you. Use your resources: Pinterest, YouTube, any number of paid subscriptions, and more! Just decide how you like to move your body and go for it. And in a pinch, I will always agree to a dance workout. So, when I need to squeeze in some fitness, I will happily commit to some moving and grooving cardio. 

6. Focus on Making Small Changes

Finding your rhythm with fitness takes time – just don’t give up! Try to focus on making small changes at the start, and eventually, your small changes will have big results. Instead of planning to exercise five times a week right from the beginning, why not aim for three workouts? Or maybe set your alarm early only on Wednesdays?

Start small. And let those small changes become your new normal, and then grow from there.

7. Get Creative with Your Space

Use the resources that are available to your kids – for yourself. Take those babies out on the town and let them get physically active. Where can they play where mommy can get her sweat on, too? Look for playgrounds or trampoline parks or anything where all ages are welcome to get moving!  (Hello, FUN!)

Your kids will be so happy to do something crazy exciting, and you get a super unique workout for the day, too! What a fun way to sneak in exercise! Oh, and bonus? Your littles will adore seeing you getting involved with them, too. #winwinwin

8. Trade Off with Your Partner

So long as your family has two adults in the house, this one will work for you. Make an arrangement where you can trade-off who gets to exercise, while the other watches the children. Then, switch!

This is a really nice option when you’re working with heavy weights and/or just really need some good old-fashioned “Me Time.” Keep the workouts short, so neither person feels overwhelmed, and you can both get on the road back to a healthier you!

9. Save Special Toys Just for Workout Time

Make a special basket of toys/activities that are just for exercise time. These items should only be brought out when mommy or daddy is in the middle of their fitness routine.

Fresh activity books or open-ended toys would be a great idea (think: building blocks or freshly sharpened colored pencils and paper), as the kids will have lots of opportunities to use the materials in an innovative way each time.

Your children will be excited to play with something “new” and “different” and they should be fully engaged for the 30 minutes you need. These special toys are perfect during a workout for busy moms, because they’ll cut down on interruptions!

Remember: Grant Yourself Grace

Remember that we go through seasons in our lives—with ups and downs throughout. When you have little ones at home, it can be hard to find time for you. Maybe your workout routine isn’t quite what you would like, and that is okay.

Grant yourself grace and know that things are always changing. Soon enough, your kids will be more than capable of entertaining themselves (without your help!) for a 30 (or even 60!) minute stretch of time, and you’ll have all kinds of opportunities to find ways to exercise.

For now, just do your best.

 

 

 

 

 

This post originally appeared on The Merry Kate.

Katie Johansen is a teacher-turned-SAHM living down in Florida with her husband and two littles.  She is always searching for that next slice of happy in between the pages of a good book or a deliciously-scented candle.  More than anything, this busy mama loves all things organization, education, and celebration!

Alexa is listening—and that’s a very good thing. Amazon’s new Alexa Guard for Echo devices can keep your home safe, detecting break-ins, fires and other alarming issues.

The free feature, which is already available on newer Alexa-enabled devices, will roll out across all Echo products starting this week. All you need to do is say, “Alexa, I’m leaving” as you stroll out the door and your Echo does the rest.

photo: Courtesy of Amazon

How does Alexa Guard work? After it’s turned on the feature monitors your home for specific sounds, such as breaking glass or a smoke alarm. If it ‘hears’ these sounds, the device sends you an alert and an audio recording. Along with the audio of the break-in, fire or other incident, Echo devices with cameras can also send a live video feed to your phone. Homeowners who also have an ADT or Ring alarm system get an added perk. Alexa Guard can also automatically set off the alarm too.

To set up Alexa Guard open the Alexa app on your phone. Tap the menu button and choose “Settings.” From the “Settings” menu, choose “Guard” and tap “Set up Guard.” Next, tap “Add” to add smoke detector and carbon monoxide detectors. Tap “Add” again to to detect the sound of breaking glass. You can also opt to activate smart lighting from the “Add” selector. Finish the set up by choosing “Confirm” and that’s it.

—Erica Loop

 

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I’m not a big fan of babies. Now I know that’s not going to be a popular opinion, but there it is. Are babies adorable, tiny miracles that smell like heaven? Sure, of course they are. But do I want one living in my home? Not particularly. It may alarm you to know that I have two children of my own, who were in fact babies at one point, and I didn’t love it. Babies made me tired (so very very tired), anxious and bored all at the same time. Like I said, I’m just not a fan.

Two weeks after my first child was born I wrote these two questions in my diary; “What if this was all a mistake?” and “What if I’m a terrible mom?” Two weeks in and I was frustrated with myself for not feeling better sooner, for not being head over heels in love with my baby. At the time I didn’t realize I was simply not a fan of babies. I worried that I was truly not cut out to be a mother.

Pretty soon after I wrote those questions, I realized I did, in fact, love my baby. But like him? That was still to be determined. I mean, sure he was objectively the cutest baby ever, and yes he was basically a genius, but hanging out with him 12 hours a day and then a few more hours every night was kind of a drag. And then to make it worse, I of course, felt horribly guilty about feeling this way. And it didn’t matter how many times little old ladies cornered me in the produce aisle and lectured me about enjoying every minute, because soon my baby would grow up and I would be so so sad, I just couldn’t do it. I couldn’t enjoy every minute, because I was just trying to enjoy a few minutes, every once in a while, on a good day.

Right before my son turned one, he started walking. People had been warning me for months; oh don’t rush it! Once he goes mobile you’ll have to chase him everywhere! So imagine my surprise when both my son and myself were infinitely happier when he started walking. He could go where he wanted to go! Yes, I had to follow him, but he could go! I no longer had to walk around holding him, pointing to crap, hoping I would eventually guess what he wanted! It was awesome. I loved it.

Eventually, I forgot enough about babies to get pregnant again, and 26 months and one week after my first baby was born, I had my second. My journal entries after my daughter was born were decidedly more upbeat than after my son, but I do remember telling everyone I would much rather spend time with a toddler over a newborn (I know, another controversial opinion). Here’s the thing about toddlers, they are terrible of course, that’s how they got that adorable nickname, but they are also hilarious. And they can (sort of, some of the time) tell you what they want. Do they scream it at you because you gave them the blue bowl when they clearly wanted the red? Sure. But now you know! I really don’t appreciate the guessing games babies play. I mean really, what do you need?!

So here’s the good news, lest you complete this story believing I am a terrible mother who hates her children; the older my kids get the more I like them! It’s crazy, I know, but it’s true. Right now they are five and three, and I am really diggin it. They are still adorably tiny and cute, but I don’t feel like I may break them just trying to get a damn shirt over their heads. They tell jokes (they don’t make any sense at all, but they tell them)! They can pump on the swings, and use the bathroom by themselves 75% of the time, and they still let me kiss and hug and snuggle them almost as much as I want. It’s a win, win people!

So what’s my point with all this? I guess it’s this, first of all, don’t let old people bully you at the grocery store, and secondly, don’t be afraid of the next stage in your kids’ lives. I mean, should you wish away your kids’ childhoods? No, probably not (unless you just really really hate this part, because the next part might be much better!). Should you try and soak up the precious minutes you have with your kids while they are little? Of course! But if your kid is in a stage right now that you are really not into, don’t feel guilty about not loving every second of it. Life is full of seasons, right? So maybe the next one will be the best yet.

As for my questions, do I have any answers yet? Well as far as whether or not I am a terrible mother, only time will tell. I imagine my children will work that out with a therapist someday, so I’ll have to get back to you. But as for wondering if this was all a mistake, I can confidently answer with a resounding no.

 

I am a freelance writer and a stay at home mom to my two kids. I love to do art projects with my kids and force them to play outside as much as possible. I am currently working on writing a novel in 40-minute bursts during naptime. 

Do you have summer on the brain? With warm weather on the horizon, it’s almost pool season! That means days soaking your well-sunscreened self in the sun while watching the kiddos splish and splash for hours on end.

While pool-filled days are fun for the whole fam, they also come with safety risks. Even though you might gate, fence and otherwise childproof your backyard pool, there’s still more that you can do to protect your child. Obviously adult supervision is the number one way to reduce the risks. But if you’re still looking for more, check out the genius devices that alert you to movement in the would-be-still water—pool alarms!

Lifebuoy Pool Alarm System

This pool alarm may come with a hefty price tag ($290), but it comes with plenty of perks. The alarm sounds when anyone or anything falls into the pool, using multiple sensors and a techy micro-processor to keep the kids safe. And bonus, you can control it with a smartphone app!

Smartpool PE23 Pool Eye

Amazon

The PoolEye ($120) is battery-powered, comes with a remote and has a loud siren to alert you when anyone steps, splashes or accidentally falls into the water.

Poolguard PGRM-2

Amazon

Made for in-ground pools, this alarm ($199), is built to detect the movement of a one-year-old child (or anyone/anything similarly sized). Use this model in pools up to 800 square feet.

 

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Marc Richards via Pexels

 

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Stay-At-Home Moms Deserve Work-Life Balance, Too—Here’s How

It’s safe to say that mom life is never boring. Millions of moms around the world battle the everyday struggle of simply finding time to “do it all”—myself included. However, even on those darkest days when you just want to give up and binge on Netflix, there’s a way to balance being a mom and finding time for yourself.

There’s no secret “key” to being able to balance everything. If there were, we’d have all unlocked that door by now, right? When it comes to finding a work-life balance, it takes patience and understanding of your true goals. This can be increasingly more difficult if you work from home as well. Trust me! When you’ve got little ones in the home during the workday, it can add a few extra stresses and hurdles, too. I’m happy to share all the tidbits of knowledge that I’ve accumulated over the years. What works for me may not work for all. But I can say that if you’re stressed now, any steps forward on a different path can help.

1. Make a real schedule.

I know, I know. Schedules can be tedious and draining… I get it. But, this is where you need to think differently. Make a schedule that fits your lifest‌yle. If you know that you’re going to get sidetracked during the day, create your daily schedule to accommodate that. It’s the only way I can manage a home, three kids and running my blog.

Planning on eating lunch at noon? Write that into your schedule. But instead of giving yourself 30 minutes to sit down and eat, pencil in an hour—just in case. If you allow yourself a bit of wiggle room in your schedule, you automatically don’t feel as stressed. And when you don’t feel as stressed, things just tend to go a bit more smoothly. Be sure to pencil in some time for things YOU enjoy throughout the day—whether that means taking a 30 minute break to watch your favorite show or making a quick call to your friend while you clean the kitchen. And when your schedule of tasks is over for the day, stop there. Don’t you dare try to clean another thing. Let yourself rest.

2. Use your phone for something other than scrolling through Facebook.

More than likely, your cell phone probably isn’t very far from you at all at this very moment. Most people know where it is at all times and are constantly grabbing it, reading mom blogs with it, playing on it or just scrolling and wasting time.

And while I won’t ask you how much time per day you spend on in Internet searching and scrolling, I will ask you to change your mindset about your phone. Instead of looking at your phone as an escape, look at your phone as a tool to help you overcome and stay on track. Phones are helpful in so many ways that we often tend to forget their true function. Your phone can help you balance everything. It’s crazy simple.

For example, if you know that you need to do at least three loads of laundry every single day, but somehow it never happens, your phone is there to help. Set an alarm to put a load of laundry in at 8 a.m. and another alarm at 9 a.m. to move it to the dryer. Boom! Just like that, you got a friendly reminder from your phone and you’re on track (now folding… that can be a whole other alarm on its own!). Keep setting those alarms throughout the day and soon enough, you’ll start to notice that your mind will create a routine that you don’t even have to think about. Plus, knowing you got your tasks done during the day means more peace at night when you have time for some TLC. No one wants thoughts about their dirty dishes during a bubble bath.

3. Outsource, outsource, outsource.

As a mom, you’re always busy! You have a million little and big things to do. The best tip I can give you is to outsource the things that you don’t enjoy doing. For me, that was grocery shopping. Loading three small kids into the minivan to find the best deals at Aldi was a marathon to say the least. I would come home utterly exhausted. Since I found InstaCart, a grocery shopping app, I haven’t been in a grocery store in months. It is well worth the small additional fee to save my sanity and time. Remember, balancing it all doesn’t mean doing it all. Getting rid of some tasks means more time and energy to take care of yourself.

4. Define your physical and mental limits, then stick to them.

I’m a firm believer that when you’re mentally healthy, it has a direct positive effect on your work-life balance. The longer that you run around and wear yourself out without giving yourself time to rest, the more crazy and chaotic your home life will be. That chaos leaves you with less time to take care of yourself. The moment that you understand your mental and physical limits as a mom, you’ll find a much more effective manner to do everything.

I understand that giving yourself time every day to relax may not be possible if you have a little tribe of children keeping you busy. But ask for help so you can collect yourself and be a strong mom again.

5. Make your happiness a priority.

When it comes to finding balance, you need to always remember to factor in your happiness and personal growth as well. Our minds are a beautiful thing and so it’s important to take care of them. No matter when you choose to do so, do something for yourself daily, even if you start with only five minutes. You’ll be amazed at how much more energized you feel. More than likely, your work-life balance will start to show improvements as well!

—Suzi Whitford for Fairy Godboss

Fairygodboss Georgene Huang & Romy Newman, Founders
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

As the largest career community for women, Fairygodboss provides millions of women with career connections, community advice and the hard-to-find intel about how companies treat women.

From those hazy newborn days to Daylight Savings havoc, being a parent means losing sleep. In fact, it can mean getting less sleep for up to six years. So how do you make up lost sleep? There are few ways you can replenish some of that missing shut eye.

A study recently published in Current Biology confirms what experts have long agreed on: you can’t make up for too many late nights simply by sleeping in on the weekend. A couple extra hours doesn’t make make up for the lost time or correct shifts that have occurred in your body’s natural circadian rhythms.

photo: Wokandapix via Pixabay

Instead of hitting the snooze alarm all weekend, a better approach is to follow the age old advice given to new moms and sleep when the baby sleeps. In other words, take a nap. “The light exposure in the morning right after your sleep period is what we think is most important for keeping those regular biological rhythms going,” Dr. Cathy Goldstein, an associate professor of neurology at the the University of Michigan Sleep Disorders Center told TIME. “If you do need to log some extra hours, a midday nap might be better.”

Keep your nap short and sweet, just twenty minutes is the perfect amount of time according to the National Sleep Foundation. Just make sure you don’t take that nap too close to bedtime or you’ll be bouncing off the walls right along with your toddler. Goldstein also suggests maintaining consistent wake times, even on weekends, and limiting nighttime light exposure to improve sleep quality.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

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A Virginia police officer has arrested our hearts when he took some time out of his day to play dolls with kids. This viral video of a police officer proves you’re never too tough for play time.

Mom Iesha Roper-Boswell captured the now-viral video of South Hill Police Cpl. C.B. Fleming getting down on the sidewalk to play with local kids, including her own daughter and niece. Fleming had been responding to a report of a gas leak (that turned out to be a false alarm) when he decided to stop and spend some time with the kids.

“I was telling him that my daughter, my niece, and some of the other children here were afraid of cops,” Iesha Roper-Boswell, who recorded the video, told CNN affiliate WTVR. “So when he came and played with them, I captured that moment, not because I thought it would go viral, but it was amazing that my niece didn’t break out into tears.”

Roper-Boswell shared the video and pictures of Fleming playing dolls and coloring with the kids on Facebook where it promptly earned tons of love and praise.

“When I got into this job, I knew there was something different, other than just writing tickets and being the bad person all the time,” Fleming, a 15-year veteran of the force, told WTVR. “I figured if I could be that bright spot in someone’s day, then that’s all that mattered.”

—Shahrzad Warkentin

Featured photo: Utility_inc via Pixabay

 

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Despite the fact that I have a gentle alarm—chimes that begin low and slow and gradually get louder—waking up at 5:15 a.m. is still not something I would describe as pleasant or peaceful.

Nevertheless, every weekday my alarm goes off at this time. I do a quick social media check while lying in bed (a habit I know I need to kick) before rolling my pregnant self out of bed. I brush my teeth while listening to NPR’s Up First, put on my favorite sweater and creep down the stairs as quietly as possible. It’s the dead of winter here in the Midwest, so in the predawn darkness, I rely on my phone to light my path.

I pour a smallish bowl of Cookie Crisp—one I won’t have to share with my three-year-old—while I heat up coconut milk for my coffee. The coffee maker is usually making its final sputters at this point and I pour the liquid life into my mug, swirling it with the milk until it’s the color of almonds.

I switch on the lamp in my living room and settle into my favorite white armchair by the window. This is the spot I’ve always dreamed of having—my writing chair, my reading chair, my watch-my-daughter-play chair—and every time I plunk down in it, it feels a little more like home. I unplug my laptop from its charger, open it to the place where I left off in my writing yesterday and get to work. At this point it’s about 5:30 a.m. and I have a solid hour before I need to get ready for my day job and begin my daughter’s grooming/breakfast/daycare-drop-off shuffle.

For the next hour, all will be calm and quiet and I will drink my coffee while it’s hot. For the next hour, no one will demand that I make them a snack, no emails will chirp as they enter my inbox and no one will stop by my office with a “quick” request. For the next hour, I can do whatever I want—and so, I write.

On a good day, I can crank out 500 words in this block. Sometimes when my creative juices are depleted, I read my favorite writers and recharge my mind. Occasionally I will just sit and think and drink my coffee, nothing obviously productive coming out of this time. But still it never feels wasted.

I once heard someone say that getting up with your kids is waking up to your day, but getting up before your kids is waking up for your day. Though I don’t use this time to consciously prepare for the demands of the day ahead, whether that’s mothering at home or working in the office, having this small window is a key way I maintain my sense of self. It’s a deeply rewarding sensation when I step into the shower at 6:30 having literally put myself first.

This doesn’t mean that every day that I wake up before my family does is amazing or that I can sail through it with perfect patience because I took care of myself. But it does mean I’m greeting those first few minutes of the day not immediately swept up in someone else’s needs—and that goes a lot further than I could have imagined in being the person I want to be.

This sacred window of early-morning time has looked different for me in various seasons of motherhood. For a long time it didn’t exist at all. When I was up multiple times a night with a nursing newborn, I rightfully clawed at every minute of sleep. There have been sleep regressions and bouts of sickness that made it unwise to cut my sleep shorter than I needed to. There was also a stretch when my daughter slept so lightly that the sound of a single step on our creaking staircase would wake her up, so I threw in the towel.

But right now, I’m in a sweet spot for making this beloved habit a regular rhythm. I don’t know exactly how long I have left; surely the expiration date will be sometime in late April when baby number two arrives and I have to give myself over to someone else’s rhythms and routines, at least temporarily. But for as long as I have the opportunity, I will make space for this time when I don’t have to be a mom or a wife or an employee—I can just be me and that can be enough.

Brittany is a wife and mom who's exploring what it means to live simply, chase gratitude, and savor the everyday moments. She runs on coffee, Jesus, and good books.

Can’t get your smartphone-obsessed kids to answer your calls? There’s an app for that—the ReplyASAP app for parents to be exact—and if your kids tend to “forget” to call, they will never forget again.

Designed by dad Nick Herbert, the simple to use app allows you to freeze your kid’s phone when they ignore your calls and texts. They are then unable to use their phones until they send you a response. It can also be set to sound an alarm if the phone is in silent mode.

https://twitter.com/OnlyInBOS/status/901806507544772608

As WCNC reports, the app has already been downloaded 75,000 times since it launched a little over a year ago and it’s not hard to see why. The concept is pretty genius.

The app is free, although for a few bucks you can upgrade to unlock more features, like adding additional phones if you have more than one forgetful teenager. The only bad news is ReplyASAP is currently only available for Android users; according to PureWow, an iOS version is in the works and will be available soon.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

Featured photo: Nature Addict via Pixabay

 

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