I am sitting here wondering why we wait until January 1st to attempt to make real changes in our lives. Perhaps there is something very exciting about it….starting fresh! I, too, like to make changes. In fact, I have several I’m committing myself to and I’m very excited about them. I have accomplished all of my goals in my career and my personal life, but the hardest one is an ongoing goal and that is simplifying. In fact, I’ve learned through my recent readings that letting go of goals can really help simplify, especially if you are super goal-oriented like me. I constantly set new and higher standards. This year, I really want to reign it in and besides getting into our new home, set less goals for myself!! I want to smell the roses, cherish each day, spend a lot of time outside in this beautiful city with my family, sign up for a fun craft or sewing class and embrace life. Rather than having these as goals, I want to make it my lifestyle, not something to accomplish but rather a way of life.
A few things I really want to remember through 2012 and beyond:
- Slow down. Rushing is rarely worth it. Life is better enjoyed at a leisurely pace.
- Goals aren’t as important as we think. Try working without them for a week. Turns out, you can do amazing things without goals. And you don’t have to manage them, cutting out on some of the bureaucracy of your life. You’re less stressed without goals, and you’re freer to choose paths you couldn’t have foreseen without them.
- The moment is all there is. All our worries and plans about the future, all our replaying of things that happened in the past — it’s all in our heads, and it just distracts us from fully living right now. Let go of all that, and just focus on what you’re doing, right at this moment. In this way, any activity can be meditation.
- When your child asks for your attention, always grant it. Give your child your full attention, and instead of being annoyed at the interruption, be grateful for the reminder to spend time with someone you love.
- You can’t motivate people. The best you can hope for is to inspire them with your actions. People who think they can use behavioral “science” or management techniques have not spent enough time on the receiving end of either.
- If you find yourself swimming with all the other fish, go the other way. They don’t know where they’re going either.
- You will miss a ton, but that’s OK. We’re so caught up in trying to do everything, experience all the essential things, not miss out on anything important … that we forget the simple fact that we cannot experience everything. That physical reality dictates we’ll miss most things. We can’t read all the good books, watch all the good films, go to all the best cities in the world, try all the best restaurants, meet all the great people. But the secret is: life is better when we don’t try to do everything. Learn to enjoy the slice of life you experience, and life turns out to be wonderful.
- Rest is more important than you think. People work too hard, forget to rest, and then begin to hate their jobs. In fitness, you see it constantly: people training for a marathon getting burned out because they don’t know how to let their straining muscles and joints recover. People who try to do too much because they don’t know that rest is where their body gets stronger, after the stress.
- There are few joys that equal a good book, a good walk, a good hug, or a good friend. All are free. ****Love this and YES, YES, YES, to this.
- The destination is just a tiny slice of the journey. We’re so worried about goals, about our future, that we miss all the great things along the way. If you’re fixated on the goal, on the end, you won’t enjoy it when you get there. You’ll be worried about the next goal, the next destination.
- A good walk cures most problems. Want to lose weight and get fit? Walk. Want to enjoy life but spend less? Walk. Want to cure stress and clear your head? Walk. Want to meditate and live in the moment? Walk. Having trouble with a life or work problem? Walk, and your head gets clear.
- Let go of expectations. When you have expectations of something — a person, an experience, a vacation, a job, a book — you put it in a predetermined box that has little to do with reality. You set up an idealized version of the thing (or person) and then try to fit the reality into this ideal, and are often disappointed. Instead, try to experience reality as it is, appreciate it for what it is, and be happy that it is.
- Gratitude is one of the best ways to find contentment. We are often discontent in our lives, desire more, because we don’t realize how much we have. Instead of focusing on what you don’t have, be grateful for the amazing gifts you’ve been given: of loved ones and simple pleasures, of health and sight and the gift of music and books, of nature and beauty and the ability to create, and everything in between. Be grateful every day.
- Create. The world is full of distractions, but very few are as important as creating.
- Get some perspective. Usually when we’re worried or upset, it’s because we’ve lost perspective.
- Don’t sit too much. It kills you. Move, dance, run, play.
- Life is exceedingly brief. You might feel like there’s a huge mass of time ahead of you, but it passes much faster than you think. Your kids grow up so fast you get whiplash. You get gray hairs before you’re done getting your bearings on life. Appreciate every damn moment.
- Fear will try to stop you. Doubts will try to stop you. You’ll shy away from doing great things, from going on new adventures, from creating something new and putting it out in the world, because of self-doubt and fear. It will happen in the recesses of your mind, where you don’t even know it’s happening. Become aware of these doubts and fears. Shine some light on them. Beat them with a thousand tiny cuts. Do it anyway, because they are wrong.
- I look forward to life! Learning, living, and loving!
These words above are from the works of Leo Babauta (only edited here and there to suit my own life and are public domain).



Love this!
Great post!
Hi!!! What wonderful pics…and a beautiful family! I wanted to get my daughter a kitchen for her birthday…the one in the pics looks similar to pottery barn…but isn’t?…Where is it from…it’s the look I am going for. I would appreciate your feedback! Thanks!
Stacey B.
Thank you! The kitchen is made by KidKraft. I compared its quality to Pottery Barn’s and its made very well. I highly recommend it.