This week, for me, is hectic, tightly scheduled, and emotionally intense.
I have classes and student conferences today and Friday--and tonight I go to my hometown so I can sit with Mom, especially, tomorrow during my brother Franc's heart bypass operation. Then assuming all goes well--which is what's supposed to happen and going to happen--I'll come back Thursday night, and teach on Friday.
Yesterday and the day before weren't so hard, since all I was doing was preparing for classes and making phone calls and wrapping Mom's present for her 85th birthday, which is today, etc. Those things are not hard, though I'd thought in advance they would be.
This morning I'm dealing with students, which isn't hard at all. Now I'm thinking it's class--yes, that's what will be hard.
I also know that when I get there, class won't be hard at all.
What I'm starting to realize is that, for the most part, assuming I'm not trying to solve some famous impenetrable math problem: None of the pieces of doing what needs to be done are hard.
If Franc's surgery doesn't go perfectly, that will be seriously hard. But that's not doing--not for me at least.
So I'm starting to think that, for the most part, doing isn't so hard. Asking myself hundreds of times a day: will I get everything done?--that's hard, but not necessary. If anything, it slows me down.
With a good plan, it ought to be possible to stop asking that useless question and dreading "the hard part."
Then the hard part would be to stop obsessing over things I can't do anything about.
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
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