Waste not those feet

How to change Big attitudes with Tiny turns.
sheila

You know that feeling when you are half way to somewhere and you realise you have forgotton something that you need. Or you cannot carry everything you need down the back in one wheelbarrow and must make two or three trips. And you think – Dammit now I have to walk all the way back. Lately when I have these realisations I am pleased.
cat

All this has come down to a little plastic gadget my daughter has me wearing that counts my footsteps. There are a number of such bracelets, I don’t want to advertise mine as I am not in the business of advertising, and that is not the aim of this discussion, you may even have one on your phone but counting my footsteps has turned my attitude on its head. Now instead of being frugal with movement, efficient with my feet, time and motion and all that stuff, I think YES – extra footsteps. Better for my body. Now, I move even more.  Instead of being annoyed that I forgot something and must walk all the way back up to the house to get it  I think. Excellent – more footsteps!steer

Interesting isn’t it. Here is another one. Another small change that has changed my attitude immensely. I came across a Happiness Study. It was on a Ted talk. I can’t remember who is doing it or even what it is called as the app just says Happiness. They are collecting data on happiness.  It is an app on my phone. It asks you questions two or three times a day, runs for 30 days and takes only seconds.  The app  asks you to grade your happiness right at that moment.  Then a few other questions – are you alone – are you at work – etc).
chicks and chickens

It is not the app as much,  it is an interesting change happening in me because of the app. I am thinking about it more.  And I am happier than I thought. I am happiest alone and working on the farm. I am happy when I am blogging. I am happy when I am cooking. What has changed is my take on the WORD happy. The label. I am more focused on remembering whether I am feeling happy so I can report it than all the things that make me feel unhappy. And this change in conscious thought is changing how I feel overall.
rooster

Now, I realise that I am gently happy most of the time. If I were to grade my self as happy ONLY when I get that great shot of sublime happiness then my scale would always be in the middle. So – I am thinking that happiness has a lot to do with actually ALLOWING ourselves to be happy.  Using the word properly.  Looking inside our own heads all alone, with no-one judging and saying to oneself – this is OK – this is my normal – and I am finding happiness here today.

Yup.  I am quite happy sitting here at sunrise writing to you.

 

The smallest changes in your daily life can create big changes in your attitude to that life.  I am happy to be walking further and further every day to get about the same amount of work done. Happy is such a cheerful word! Fit is a good word too!

Change is possible.

WILD!

No sunrise again – but there is light. So off I go into my world.

Have a lovely day.

Love celi

 

78 responses to “Waste not those feet”

  1. I mark my steps with my cell phone, reluctantly at first, now find myself getting in much needed steps most days, and then some more as the days wear on, and it has become a delightful and healthful friend, getting me outdoors, around the park, etc. – with the added bonus of shedding some pounds. No sun here, either, but, just the same the day has dawned. 🙂

      • Oh, yes, I do think this is addictive. I keep checking my steps and I have been known to run up and down the stairs to the second floor – just to reach the next level. 🙂 I find it to be a very healthy addiction.

        • I also have one of those gadgets that counts my steps and yes, I am addicted to it as well. It must be a healthy addiction because it’s making me move around more and in the process, I am working off my calories for the day. If I haven’t reached my goal by the end of the day, I walk around the house to achieve it!

  2. Happy is a beautiful word isn’t it? Content is also a nice median to be in. How I feel right now is content – not overly worried or stresed, just in a mode of doing what I like at a pace that is right.

    But a part of me has to be sad…. today would have been Mom’s 80th birthday. Our first without her here. My beagle dug me a nice hole yesterday – so I put some sunflower seeds in it before closing it up and surrounding it with planters she can’t jump over. It is probably too early for sunflower seeds, but we will see what happens. BTW: I’ll bring Angel up when your ready to dig the garden, she does nice work although the holes may not be exactly where you want them. 😉

    • Today would have been my father’s 81st birthday. I think of him often, especially when I am trying to repair something around the house as he taught me many of those skills.

    • Yes Angel can help! The wildflower swathe is designed, the seed ordered for the spring and it will go in in the spring as soon as it is dry and will be right where everyone can see it from the road. The first two years will be a lot of hand weeding though. How is Angel at weeding!?

    • Today would’ve been my mom’s 102nd! She will be gone 10 years come September. I totally agree with you on being content. I think no one can be happy happy ALL the time but how lucky you are if you can be content with your life and all it’s ups and downs. I have found that I am quite content with my life at this point. Thinks could always be better but then again they could be way worse too.

  3. I have seen the pedometer on my cel … I would have to remember to carry my cel at all times, which I don’t. Hope the sun makes a surprise appearance for you today. Laura

    • No sun again I think – in fact it occurred to me as I was carrying hay down the back for the cows that maybe Tolkein was in a similar winter when he wrote Lord of the Rings. With his dark clouds that never lifted. Though I know it was during war time but maybe that year had a dark, dark winter. c

  4. You are so true. Little changes make for big changes in the bigger outlook of life. Mom has one of those things too that count steps/tells her how many miles she’s wobbled throughout the day. You change your outlook when wearing that thing. You aim to walk more – to achieve more. Have an awesome day sweet friend. XOXO – Bacon

  5. Like most Minnesotans, I distrust happiness. There is something about it that just doesn’t seem right or shall we say, seems seemly. It is not that we wallow in unhappiness, though we do, it is more that spending too much time being happy attracts the devils of misfortune and unhappiness – or as psychology suggests, the mind seeks the same level between happiness and unhappiness and will always reset itself if one gets too much of either – and who wants that? It’s just better to avoid the whole mess.

    (In reality, we Minnesotans are a happy bunch but we like to hide it, least too many people move up here and bring their lousy attitudes with them). 🙂 🙂

    • This is interesting. I don’t particularly like the word ‘happy’ either – and I don’t think it should be the goal. I feel happiness is too fleeting. I’d rather be full of joy, which seems to me a more lasting state, and something deeper than happiness. Or satisfied, which also seems deeper and more lasting. I like what you said about distrusting happiness. I think because it is in our Declaration of Independence – the thing about the right to pursue happiness – I wish another word had been used. I think we Americans have a selfish attitude around the word happiness, like it is the only thing we should be seeking. Well if all we pursued was happiness, no one would go to work each day. It would be lovely if our work made us happy, but the simple truth is that for most people it doesn’t. Maybe this is all mixed up in my dislike for laziness, I don’t know – this is going down a road I didn’t intend. Anyway, all of this made me think which is always good. 🙂

      • Hmm, good thoughts and I think maybe we are agreeing. Happiness is the word the app uses which has made me think that the happy they are looking to hear about is not that wild wooping happiness but ordinary daily happiness you describe. There is a scale you adjust though, which makes me even examine the level of happiness. It is an interesting piece of research for me anyway. c

    • I see your secret ploy. Well done. Similar maybe the the Greek Mama’s spitting on the new babies head. Yes. I understand you now. OK! I hope you have a really horrible day – no sunbathing on the deck, it is too warm yet!

  6. I love your term ‘gently happy.’ That is maybe better than content, although I have a positive connotation to content, not the negative one of just being lethargic about things. I am usually content or gently happy, and when the big Happy comes along every once in awhile, it’s even better!

    When my boys were growing up they got tired of me telling them that ‘All of Life is a Case of Attitude.’ But I believe that being mindful of yourself really makes a difference. And you can adjust your attitude, mostly. (Although having to do a stressful day job certainly can put a dent in the gently happy. Glad I don’t have to deal with that anymore. For that, I am Grateful).

  7. Lovely Lulu. I see a tween chicken. Are they faring well with their new compatriots? Changing an attitude can be difficult, but so has its rewards. In AA, they call it Stinkin’ Thinkin’ and gently encourage members to knock it off! ha For me, it is often housework that I have to change my attitude about, from dread to mild enthusiasm. Now, you have me thinking and it’s not stinking! Have a wonderful Day C.

    • The tweens are doing really well, they have their hiding places but are also out there with the big ones eating and drinking like crazy. I have overcome the housework problem by blasting the house with a talking book. I can clean for hours if the story is good. Stinkin’ Thinkin’ – a good saying!

  8. Love today’s post! I think that taking the time to feel grateful can make us happy. And I love the app you mentioned, as it sounds like it can make one mindful of happiness, and gratefulness several time a day. How wonderful! And, thanks to you, I just put a ‘counting steps’ app onto my phone! The challenge will be to carry my phone with me everywhere. That’s the tricky part! XO

    • Carrying the phone is easier in winter, more pockets, plus you need to carry it in the house too to collect those footsteps as well. I Look froward to seeing how many steps you make in a day! You will be surprised. And the challenge of collecting footsteps will help you remember it. Report back tomorrow and no jogging on the spot while washing dishes!!

  9. I used to wear a podometer as part of a phys ed project I was doing with my students. I found that it made me MUCH more aware. I’m retired now and don’t wear a fit bit type bracelet. However, when doing my chores I will park my manure truck in the centre of the paddock and then do my walking back and forth. I too love to think … a few more steps! We also have a habit now of parking on the outside of parking lots when we go shopping – and walk in to the store – a few more steps. The change to my thinking was permanent!

    • I do the exact same thing — park the muck cart in the middle of the pasture and then walk back and forth to it with my forks full of manure. My husband thinks I’m nuts. (yes I wear one of those gadgets on my wrist). I also volunteer to get the mail from way down at the end of the driveway — its endless. If I forget something upstairs (I’m forever forgetting things), I used to get pissy about it; now its an opportunity. Funny how that works.

  10. Perspective is everything. No wasted steps vs more movement. Just lovely. A happiness app? Had not heard of that one. I have always wondered how you define happiness. I tend to use the word, content most of the time. I’d love to see that Ted talk. I watch many of them. Very inspiring. Have a terrific Tuesday with lots of steps.

    • The man who is running the program (you sign on for thirty days) is trying to answer that exact question. What makes us happy. or maybe what is happy. He has already found that when people are not busy they are more likely to have unhappy thoughts. Not rocket science. My Mum used to say if you are sad and cold – mop the floor. c

    • I’ve been reading all of the comments and thinking the exact same thing…. much of what can be described as ‘happiness’ is just how one defines the condition… and I think that varies to some extent depending on who you’re speaking with. To me, at least, the person with the optimistic attitude is far more likely to experience more happiness than otherwise and changing people’s attitudes is not the easiest thing in the world. If this study ends up defining specific things people can do to change their condition to one of happiness, then I would say it’s well worth the effort! ~ Mame 🙂

  11. Love today’s post and the photos. I too wear a device to count steps and it is quite a motivator and, yes, it stops the grumbling when I have to backtrack to get something or make a second trip. I look forward to my daily visit to your world.

    • I lost my fitbit for a few weeks at one point (found it in the mud by a gate after a particularly rotton rain storm – it still works by the way) and told my daughter and she immediately said Oh NO what a waste of STEPS! and sent me another one straight away. Luckily it turned up after I found the old one so she could get her money back. But she (and my son) could not bear the idea of uncounted steps. I am still trying to get my head around that one! love love c

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