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Exercise Perspective: Harnessing the Power of the 5-Year Rule

Exercise Perspective: Harnessing the Power of the 5-Year Rule

How to exercise perspective with the 5-year rule.

There are two things I loathe with equal fervor: Traffic, and ticks. Today I stared both in the face. 

First my toddler awakens in an epic mood; when I attempt to brush her hair she collapses and howls. I let her stay like that for a while – a good three minutes at least – and while she thrashes around like a beetle on her back I ruminate on whether this is a battle I need to pursue. Whether it’s a fight I really need to win.

Will this matter in five years?

The answer, of course, is no. So Screw it! I say, and my daughter leaves the house with a single giant dread lock at the nape of her neck.

It takes us over an hour (sixty entire minutes!) to get to preschool. It’s a new, depressing low, but we make it. I give my daughter a kiss on her neck just beside the giant dread lock and saunter from her classroom like a warrior, bloody but victorious, from the battlefield.

Traffic is so light on the way home I practically fly. The poor suckers in the opposing lane appear positively wretched as they sit, unmoving, in their cars. I bite my lip, feeling sorry for them but so, so grateful to be me. I’m free and almost home!

And then my cell phone rings.

Something drops in my gut. I don’t even need to look at the screen because I know. I know it’s my toddler’s preschool.

“Hello?”

“Stephanie? We need you to come back -”

“What’s wrong?”

“It’s nothing …Well, it’s a tick. We found a tick on your daughter.”

Cue the Mom Guilt. It floods me as I make an illegal U-turn and idle in the same traffic that frazzled me thirty minutes earlier. Nothing’s moving and I’m fighting the urge to Google Lyme Disease as I sit there in Rush Hour Hell. I wonder how I could have missed a tick on my daughter when I dressed her this morning. I wonder how long the lecherous creature has been camping out on her perfect, innocent skin. I wonder how I could be so incompetent.

And then, amidst my inner anguish, comes perspective:


Will this matter in five years?


I think about it for a long time, I really do. I think about how there’s probably a reason why my car’s rearview is small and the windshield is big, and how this is a beautiful metaphor for life. I decide I will happily forget about this morning – about both the tick and the traffic – quite soon. I think about how, at my core, there’s a life force that’s screaming, and I don’t want her to scream. I want her to sing.

So I march back into my daughter’s classroom. I have my tweezers with me (Why? Because I’m Super Mom, that’s why) and I examine the tick. It’s barely imbedded, and it isn’t even the kind that carries Lyme. Piece of cake! So I remove it with nary a flinch, then I give my daughter a gigantic hug and tell her she’s so brave. I square my shoulders. I’m on my way once more.

Much later, when my infant is howling and refuses to settle, I feel my anxiety rise. This is unlike her (she’s usually so even-tempered!) and there’s nothing like a baby’s wails to incite within me an urge to act. But again I find myself using the five-year approach and I’m instantly calmed, because none of this will matter beyond today, let alone this month or year.

There’s nothing earth-shattering about the five-year approach. It isn’t a novel idea, and it probably won’t change lives. But the technique invites the appearance of one important thing that’s missing in most mothers’ frenetic, daily lives: Perspective. So, to my fellow mom friends in the trenches: Get good and frazzled when it’s worth it. But know it’s rarely worth it.

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Denim jeans were once the preferred trouser for cowboys in the American west; some decades later, they became a symbol of rebellion for non-conformist teens. These days jeans are all about comfort and casual style, and the average American woman owns 7 pairs. And yet blue jeans also happen to have one of fashion's biggest environmental footprints. On today's show Sarene Alsharif reveals the harsh realities associated with jeans production; she also shares practical strategies for transforming this wardrobe staple into a sustainable solution.   Here's a preview: [7:00]  Stone-washed with actual stones? Dyed with carcinogenic dyes? Uncovering your favorite pair's dirty little enviro-secrets  [13:00] Want some stretch? Revisiting our desire for synthetic fibers in our denim  [23:00] The trend cycle = smoke and mirrors [27:00] It's a marriage not a fling (and other tried-and-true sustainable fashion tips) [31:00] Stephanie's nihilist thoughts: What happens when collective action matters, and yet the collective isn't doing its part?   Resources mentioned: How To Save The World With A Pair Of Jeans (via YouTube) Tad More Tailoring Atomic Habits (by James Clear) The Comfort Crisis Embrace Discomfort To Reclaim Your Wild, Happy, Healthy Self (February's Book Club pick!)   This show is listener-supported. Thank you for supporting! **If you're a financial supporter over on Apple Podcasts and want to join Book Club, please email me and let me know! For privacy reasons, Apple won't share your contact info with me. Just email me and I'll happily add you!** Join our (free!) Facebook community here. Find your tribe. Sustainable Minimalists are on Facebook, Instagram + Youtube @sustainableminimalists Say hello! MamaMinimalistBoston@gmail.com.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Hello there, I’m Stephanie. I live a crazy, beautiful life as a full-time wife, blogger + mother to two spirited daughters. I’m on a mission to simplify eco-friendly living so as to greater enjoy life’s sweeter moments.

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