I couldn’t help but think of this iconic 1980s craft as we
experience this pandemic, or pan-damn-ic, as I like to say. Over these past 11
months my world has become smaller. Our social interactions have become
limited. We have reduced the chances of contracting and spreading the virus by
strategic decisions—minimizing our activities and exposure. And while we
coasted for a good while—with winter and the latest wave of snow, ice, and frigid
temps—our bubble continues to shrink. The cabin fever in this house practically
has its own scent it’s so palpable.
A month ago when my youngest, Scottie, tested positive for
Covid I felt the walls closing in—that the extremes we’ve taken with being virus
cautious were taken to yet another level to protect others. The anxiety, worry,
and isolation took its mental and emotional toll. Luckily we got through with
the rest remaining negative and Scottie’s symptoms mild.
But I kept feeling a suffocating, surrounding energy of getting
smaller…maybe my shoulders started hunching? My patience getting limited? Or I
noticed my kids’ friendship circles tightening?
Then at one point when reflecting—like the plastic Shrinky Dinks
after their 3 minute oven stint becoming brighter and sturdier—I realized that somehow
my values and priorities have magnified and solidified.
When forced to focus under stress, what values and
priorities emerge?
I recently read the 2016 best-selling memoir When Breath
Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi, a 36 year-old neurosurgeon. Confronted with
his own mortality he ponders a number of life questions. One nugget I took away?
When stripped of the many causes of noise and static that can often derail dreams
and suck up time, what do you prioritize and value, and how do you live with that
purpose? Not just go through the motions that many of us do…but consciously
make decisions and LIVE.
While I don’t wish illness and the hardships this virus has
caused for hundreds of thousands (in this country alone), I wonder if the
universe caused this uncomfortable pause for some good to be realized. I do
suggest if allowed that space, reflect how you have changed, and maybe in some
ways-- for the better. We’ve all been under pressure—in the pandemic oven like
those plastic Shrinky Dinks—and maybe the lessons learned in your smaller worlds
will help you emerge with a clearer sense of what’s most important, that values
only solidified, and your life will end up brighter and more colorful.
“The tricky thing about
terminal illness (and life, probably) is your values are constantly changing.
You try to figure out what matters to you and then you keep figuring it out.”
“I began to realize that
coming face to face with my own mortality, in a sense, had changed nothing and
everything.”
--Paul Kalanithi, When
Breath Becomes Air
It will be excited to see, as the world expands in time, if people will fill their lives with everything after such famine, or if people will be selective with what they fill their lives with.
ReplyDeleteLove me my Shrinky Dinks!