Monday, January 13, 2014

Goals are Good

I was thinking about organizing myself for 2014.

The past few years, I've looked forward to YA writer Katy Upperman's yearly blog post on goals. You can read it and while you're at it, also check out her link to a great post goal setting here.

Katy taught me the importance of setting monthly goals, which I write down and keep in front of me on my desk. I also write yearly writing goals and tuck them into the back of my Bible. Because can you really forget anything you tuck into the back of your Bible?

I am a closet hoarder. From the outside, my house looks pretty clean and neat. But look in any closet and dear Lord! Here are some organizational problems I have and how I vow to resolve them and become a better, more organized person in 2014:

--I will keep no more than fifty emails in my inbox at one time. Chuckle. That's all I'm saying about that one.

--I will stop compulsively saving decorating magazines which are in two giant piles taking up room in my closet. I don't know why I do this, other than looking at beautiful things makes me…happy. But the piles are out! And they will take some time to reaccumulate.

--I will stop shoving things in my front hall closet so guests can actually put their coats there instead of on the back of the living room couch. Stash nothing, toss everything, right?

--I will stop buying books and hiding them under the bed. My friends know I almost kicked this habit a year ago, but the pile is ba--ack, bigger and better than ever, even though I am using my kindle more and more. If I was stranded in my room for years, let's just say lack of reading material would not be a problem.

--I will stop allowing the mail pile to take over my kitchen. I know, I know. Handle it once, sort it right away, pitch everything possible. Sounds so simple, right?

--I will call the 800 numbers to stop delivery of half my catalogs, most of which I hoard in a pile and then end up recycling before I even look at them.

--I have to clean my attic. It is loaded with fake flower arrangements, another compulsion.

--I will stop buying fake flower arrangements. Even though I love them because they are colorful and bright and make me happy in a city where it is cloudy a lot of the year.

--Also, are those not-yet-born grandchildren ever going to play with their parents' toys cluttering my attic? What about those precious dog-eared children's books I just can't seem to part with, remembering all those wonderful hours of reading stories to my kids?

--I will take my recycle bags to the grocery story every time. Every time, that is, that my kids don't toss them out of the car at random to make more from for themselves and their stuff.

--And even take recycle bags to other shopping, like at the mall, which I never do. Why not?

--If I get under contract this year, I will pay someone to deep clean my house once a month because it will no longer be worth my time. Actually, I almost never deep clean anyway! My daughters and son were helping me do this long-neglected work over break. The oldest asked, what's a baseboard? Very scary.

--I will try yoga for stress relief. Just…because.

--I will eat more foods that I can't pronounce like quinoa and jicama and make sure half my plate is veggies at every meal. (Another chuckle.)

--I will be more balanced. I will read more of those amazing books waiting in my kindle or under my bed. I will stop obsessing over whether I am good enough, fast enough, talented enough and simply do what author Robin Covington posted on Facebook one day (and this might be a paraphrase): Do Your Best and Try Not to Suck.

--That is the best advice I read all year. As I prepared to turn in edits to my agent for the first time this past fall, I was terrified. Every morning I would sit at my computer and think, dear God, someone is going to read this and freeze. So I wrote that little saying down and put it in front of me. Because that's all any of us can do. And there is some kind of great relief in that. Just do your best and try not to suck. Simply saying that takes some cosmic burden off my shoulders and allows me to forge on.

Happy new year, everyone. I wish you health, happiness and peace in the year ahead.



Speaking of fake flower arrangements…one of my faves. 




4 comments:

  1. I need to use at least half of your organizational goals myself. My hubby says I can't ever hire a maid because I would clean before they came to my house.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Angelina, I think that's what I'd do, too. By the time you stash everything back to where it belongs, may as well just pull out the vac and finish the job off. Still, I do fantasize about one day being so busy I simply just can't do it myself anymore :)...

      Delete
  2. Whoa, you've worn me out with all your plans, Miranda. :-) I made a resolution I'd get back to my yoga, not only for the stress relief, but for the body that sits in a chair all day long. Meant to start last week, but.... Tomorrow, for sure.

    Love the advice - Do Your Best and Try Not to Suck. It's my new motto.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Sandy, I hear you about chair butt. I do Jazzercise twice a week but I heard yoga takes your mind to a whole new level. I've never tried it!
      No, not so many goals. I just would like to get clean these parts of the house I never get to. I'm constantly cutting corners to get more writing done and it really shows. Just once I'd like to know what it feels like to have the house completely clean…well, in my fantasies anyway...

      Delete