Living an unmeasured life.
This is my goal this year.
I don’t know about you but I was at the point in my life where I was measuring too much.
I had a check list I would keep in my prayer journal to check off my spiritual, relational, intellectual, emotional, career, physical, and financial goals.
As a wellness teacher, I believe in S.M.A.R.T. goals, yet I personally have gotten to a point where if I got to the end of my day and didn’t check the box, my inner dialogue would be focused on what I didn’t do rather on what I did accomplish that day.
I am in a place where I know what serves me best so that I can serve others well. So this year I am stepping away from tracking my life and will be more focused on living my life.
At the end of the day, I don’t want to see that I am 100 steps short of my goal, I want to see that I enjoyed my walk on the trail with a friend, or by myself. I want to know I made time to visit with my neighbor instead of making sure I listened to a podcast. I want to make room to be more present with, and for, others rather than focusing on my checklist, giving myself the freedom for God to move my feet instead of having my steps predetermined each day.
I will share that I’ve stopped tracking the steps on my walks, and it is freeing!
I will be transparent that I am running a race in June so I will need to track my mileage to train, but that is what it needs to be, a tool, not a measure of my worth.
I share all of this in case you too have reached a point where life has become a checklist of goals to complete each day. If so, I invite you to join me to…
pause. breathe. pray.
May we release the need to check off lists to feel like we are enough. May we stop measuring our lives by our own standards, or by the standards other people have set for us. Instead, may we live close to God and the principles He calls us to. When we do this, we are freed from the checklists, from the feeling of not being enough, and we will find greater freedom, joy and peace within - which is what we are all aiming for anyways, isn’t it?
With love and hope,
Shawn