Family · Inspiration · Marriage

Grad Life Voices: Living in the Moment

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– written by Tash, a current graduate wife

I am a planner; not a meal planner – that would be helpful, but instead, a crystal ball planner. I know I want to build a family home, and although it will be years before we can finance such a project, I feel like I am already intimate with every nook and cranny of the design. I knew how our wedding would look years before our engagement, and what we would name the family dog. I’m so goal driven and outcomes based that I sometimes feel overwhelmed by the uncertainty of our current situation and feel an inner desperation to settle, to relax, and to take a breath.

My husband has been my very best friend for a very long time. He is incredibly intelligent, loyal, and loving. He is deep, intuitive and the most incredible thinker. Like most of us, if he isn’t following his passion, he is simply a shadow of himself. Our children are 3 and 5, and, quite frankly, amazing human beings. It’s so important that my children watch what my husband is going through, because, dare I say it, I believe they are wired in a very similar way. It’s so important that my significant other is at university, because he is happy and healthy and smiling!

And then there is me. I am 27. I am a Mum and a youth worker, but most critically, I am the wife of a post grad student. I say most critically because my children deserve the stability of a strong and connected Mum and Dad. Given the pressures of the grad life, I’m okay with my order of focus.

Looking back on my past plans, it seems my crystal ball lead me on a defunct path. Where I once thought I would be a stay at home mum, I actually work. With living in a small country township, and with extended family members who could have that magic time at home with their own children, I was initially resentful.

Eventually I came to an understanding about the gift of our circumstances. My young children have genuine and incredible friendships, built through their time at preschool. They have an understanding of the outside world and a light, but clear belief of the importance of societal contribution. Through the work opportunities I have had, I’ve discovered more about myself and my abilities in the last few years than ever before. My husband’s return to university has pushed me to discover who I really am, and the gifts and talents that I have to offer. Interactions and progress within my career has given me a personal confidence that positively impacts my parenting. The intensity in which we as a household live drives us to be conscious about getting quiet time out in wide open spaces. Grad Life is a gift that has allowed for self development and enriched family life.

Despite this, I still fall into patterns of fear and loss.

I’m lucky in that I know my home is ‘home’ until The Engineer finishes his PhD. But where is home base for the long term? What if I have to let go of the community I’m so attached to, of the friends and neighbours that have been behind us during such an intense time? What if my children will have to learn to let go of their real world relationships and substitute them for Skype and Facebook as they go about making new connections in another town? What if this path isn’t leading us to the security that we convince ourselves it will, and if the husband doesn’t find work that meets his emotional, social and intellectual needs?

It’s a big, scary, wide world out there.

We can plan until the cows come home, until we’ve got the future colour coded, alphabetized, and listed. Then, when plans don’t come into fruition on our time line, it can be a lonely experience, and it can hurt.

So, we have to consciously rewire our brain. We have to push against ourselves, and we have to settle. Because as morbid and as cliché as it sounds, we get to be alive today. Who knows what tomorrow will bring. What works for one may not work for another, but I highly recommend reading “The Happiness Project” by Gretchin Rubin, to help get the inspiration flowing. Listed below are some of the wee baby steps that are helping retrain the way I approach this stage of life.

I began a gratitude journal. It’s where I slow myself right down, and take note of how good I’ve actually got it. My children are healthy, my husband is healthy, and my life has purpose. Some days, it’s simply I found the energy to make my morning coffee – that’s okay too. It’d be far worse a day if you didn’t have the energy to make your morning coffee!

Photography is therapy, it simply changed my outlook on life. I by no means sing my own praises, but I am fortunate to have a camera, and a great local camera club to learn from. I have slowly become aware of natural beauty, the colours of the sky, the shapes of the clouds, and the tranquility of water. I think my children are having a hard time with our lifestyle, but then I look back at the photographic memories and realise just how much mood and attitude can mess with our outlook and opinions. It turns out my kids are having an incredible childhood, and I’ve got the images to prove it. I have amazing relationships with my children’s teachers and they reiterate the balance in our children and the stories they share. So actually, as far as parents go, we’re doing just fine.

I’ve created shrines in my house. A ‘happy place’ shrine has little mementos of time with my family, and a bunch of my favourite flowers. I walk past it and smile, regardless. A shelf in our bookcase has been dedicated to our wedding, with the photo album, a shell from the beach we had our photos, the communion cup and a few other little extras. These things remind me that I am loved.

When I finish work early, I head to the university. It means the hubby and I get to travel home together and score a few minutes down time in one another’s company. Friday nights are simply not work nights. Sure we both want his PhD, but we want our marriage more. We have a jar with about a dozen washi-taped sticks. I googled ‘in-house’ and ‘budget’ date ideas, wrote them on the sticks and the stuck them in our jar. On date night, we don’t have to think about what to do, the jar will tell us. It doesn’t have to be flashy or expensive, but it means I’m not waiting for the day I get my husband back.

I accept where I am right now, in this moment. If I’m happy, that is okay. If I’m sad, that is okay. If I don’t feel up to entertaining once a month, it is okay. I am me with my strengths, weaknesses, dreams and desires and there is nothing wrong with that – in fact, it’s perfect. There is a reason I am the way I am, no justification required. There is a roof over my head, so therefore I need to love it. This is my home, and I am blessed to have one. It’s a time consuming but incredibly rewarding project to make it the best darn home I can, spending as minimally as I can. The future house loses its lustre when it means I have to leave the one I’ve created!

I haven’t nailed it, I still struggle with the concept, but living in the moment is certainly one of the key and most meaningful lessons that is emerging throughout our journey. Rest assured that if this post resonates with you at all you’re not alone, and that supposedly, one day we’ll look back and realise just how awesome we all really are.

Graduation day will come, for our significant others, and for us.

 As a graduate wife, how do you live in the moment?

Monday's Food for Thought

Monday’s Food for Thought: Free Light

new food for thought

Alfredo Moser is famous, but you would never know it.

The Brazilian mechanic devised a method to give his home electricity during the day – using plastic bottles filled with water and bleach. Over the last two years, the method has taken off in over 15 different countries, where electricity is expensive, especially so for those below the poverty line. As Moser’s Lamps continue to provide free light to an estimated one million homes next year, allowing them to light their homes to work, and in some cases, grow food, he has expected nothing in return. Instead, he has given the world a gift.

Mr. Moser states in the article (which also contains an amazing video of how the lamps work):“It’s a divine light. God gave the sun to everyone, and light is for everyone. Whoever wants it saves money. You can’t get an electric shock from it, and it doesn’t cost a penny.”

A wonderfully positive story to kick off your Monday!

-Mandy

Inspiration

When Light Shines Through

Note:  This piece was drafted a few months back during Oxford’s incredibly wet summer season.

It’s been rainy in Oxford lately.  Like­­, really rainy––so rainy that I can count on one hand the times I have seen sunshine in the past month.  Depressing, huh? It seems that every sort of possible weather record has been broken this summer in England.  Whew.  We are hanging in there though, and we’ve gotten really good at puddle jumping….or rather puddle wading, as my daughter has resorted to swimming in giant puddles near our flat since this summer has yielded zero pool time for her.  You gotta make do, right?

The other morning it was actually sunny when I awoke, and the feeling of warm sunlight streaming through the blinds just made my whole spirit come alive.  I jumped out of bed, made tea cheerfully and had a wonderful time of quiet and reflection all before my daughter awoke.  It was amazing to see how much just a little bit of sunshine lifted my whole being.  As I sat and reflected that morning I couldn’t help but take note of how much more fresh and inviting my flat appeared in the sunlight.  It was like my furniture and the artwork, being illuminated by the sunlight, were saying, “Ah, this is how we were meant to be seen!  These are our true colors!”  Don’t get me wrong: cozy lamps are a good thing, and they are my sanity on the rainy dark days of late, but something about the true source of light illuminating my flat that morning made me wish it would never stop shining.

When you see sunshine for days on end you can easily take it for granted. Treasuring and savoring these few little gifts of it here and there this past month has really taught me to appreciate it, and it’s surprising how much I have been reflecting on it. Here are some simple truths that I have recognized lately:

  • I feel warm and good when standing in the sunshine.
  • I feel seen and known and somehow recognized in sunlight.
  • I feel inspired and eager to press on when the sun shines.
  • I feel illuminated and powerful when the sun is shining on me.

I don’t think it’s by mere chance that some of the greatest and oldest universities in the world have the word ‘light’ included in their mottos. Oxford’s motto is “The Lord is my Light.” Columbia University’s beautifully states, “In Thy light, shall we see the light”.  And Yale’s motto is “Light and Truth”.  I’m sure there are many others I am not including.

Almost all of these are spiritual allusions, which speak personally to me.  But even if not so much to you, the notion of light illuminating darkness and paving the way to knowledge and truth is a pretty profound image to reflect upon.

I know that sometimes my husband’s work can get incredibly tedious and exhausting, and the direction of his research can start to get quite hazy.  It’s a constant prayer of mine that clouds of confusion would be gone from his studies and that his work would be illuminated by light, creativity and truth.

 How do these mottos and metaphors of light/knowledge speak to you?

-M.C.