- Transition offers a new start with new opportunities. This is one of the things I've always liked best about fall and a new school year. The change in teachers and classmates seemed to offer up the chance for new relationships (or improved ones). And it meant the chance to learn new things. So how about you? As we head into fall and a new school year, even if you (or your children) aren't headed off to class, what new opportunities are presenting themselves? Is there a volunteer position you've been thinking about trying that starts up in fall? Will you be encountering new people during the course of your daily routine? Take the time to look at your routine with fresh eyes and search for the opportunities that might be there.
- Transition creates a chance for careful consideration. At least I hope it does. It's common in American culture to think through life and make resolutions when we approach the New Year. But why not do the same during any transition and particularly prior to a new school year? Sure, it takes time to do this, but when you think of how streamlined your life can be when it's aligned to your priorities, it is well worth it. Can you find a two- to three-hour stretch of empty time (or even longer) where you can contemplate your dreams and purposes, and can evaluate your current activities and commitments against the grid of those dreams and purposes? Do so, then resolve to make changes where activities don't fit.
- Transition gives you an excuse to dump the bad stuff. Things are changing already, so why not take some control over that change yourself? In your time of contemplation, did you discover habits you've fallen into that sabotage your productivity? Make a vow to dump them and then change up the patterns that trigger those habits. I'm planning to chunk my activities during my work day in an effort to ditch the rabbit-trail mentality that leads me astray too often. But it doesn't just have to be habits. Anything that has been weighing you down, that you have the power to get away from, can be dumped as part of your transition - even unhealthy relationships.
Monday, August 15, 2011
The Benefits of Transition
It's a week of transition in my household as my three children return to school this week. We're enjoying the last drops of summer laziness, even while filling a pitcher of preparedness for the new routine to come. And like every year, ever since I was a little girl, my heart has been going pitter-pat at the thought of a new school year. I've always approached back-to-school time with gleeful anticipation and with good reason: transition grows us. Here are some benefits I think we gain and which can boost our contentment as we go through transition of any kind:
Labels:
priorities,
purpose,
schedule
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