My morning started off incredible today. I had energy. I wore my new dress, then changed into my new romper when the dress proved ill fit for housework.
It feels like a luxury to have so many clothes. I wonder what life was like when they had two, maybe three changes of clothes to wear. Two daily outfits and a special one.
It seems selfish that so many dream of more while I, in my privileged state, dream of less.
The world has become so noisy. We have media of all varieties, all spreading the same 2-3 narratives, pounding information into our primitive minds at all hours of the day. Every time you turn on your phone—our most used tool—you wind up longing for something you don’t have, or looking for new ways to spend hard earned resources.
Your time, your attention, what you listen to, none of it belongs to you anymore. Someone, somewhere, is paying for it. Always. I’m not convinced they care about us outliers who disagree. There’s no ‘big brother’ waiting to shut me down if I say anything. It’s the agreeable masses I’m concerned about. And that’s who they’re concerned about, too. As long as they can keep those ones contained, they’ll do the dirty work.
I stepped away from creating and advocating in pursuit of what I preached about. The change starts in our homes. And it required me to stop inviting them into my home with this little device.
But I’m a writer, and I still like writing.
So I wore my romper and folded laundry. Then I grew tired and put the laundry aside, because my cold from last week continues to siphon my energy. When I was done, I put on my yoga pants and a tank top and sweater and took my youngest to gymnastics.
Three outfits in one day. An entire wardrobe for some people, and more than that for others, in one day.
Then, I returned home and my headache crashed in once more. Like waves, every time I bent over or moved too quick, it crashed through the back of my skull. So, I rested. I watched 1923, and texted my grandma in law who loves these shows. Then I started supper.
I made the potatoes and carrots, my husband made the minute steaks. My eldest hardly ate, my youngest ate three times what she was served. I ate my share, my husband his. Then the girls enjoyed their last slices of cake, and my youngest asked for cereal. Clearly, she’s in her next growth spurt and my eldest is out of her recent one.
Now, I bathe my baby as I type. Distracted parenting. Am I so wrong for it? Maybe. But I do love to write. Is it so bad to want to write while she draws all over the tub with the markers she was given? I wonder what life would be like without a phone at all. If I just watched her write.
That’s what I’ll do. Then I’ll put her to bed and miss her. And then tomorrow, we will start again.