Close the boardroom closet
“Never confuse movement with action.” – Ernest Hemingway
I don’t remember ever being this busy. Not even that time in the fourth grade when I was starring as Johnny Appleseed in our class play, learning to play the autoharp, and simultaneously creating my report on Missouri, the “Show Me” state, in a cardboard box panorama (I believe the Latin term for it is “Cardboardorama®”). Remember that fantastic technology?, those stories drawn on long paper rolled between two dowels inside a box decorated to look like a TV set; it was like watching the merry history of those stubborn Missourians unfurl before your very eyes. (Powerpoint’s got nothing on Cardboardorama® 2.0).
Now, some _____ years later, with so many granular pieces of responsibility and eagerness and duty—I’m scaring myself and small children with my to-do lists. On Saturday, my head exploded – well, that might be an exaggeration – but my eyes did bulge out a bit at the sheer enormity of all the things I need to do, the things falling through the cracks, the things halfway done with no more time to finish them because we’re off and running to the next happy thing, the things I forgot to do (Melanie, if you’re reading this, I hope you had a fantastic birthday, girlfriend! You too, Lora!). It was bound to happen, this spontaneous combustion. I knew life was at Orange Alert level when I wasn’t sending thank you notes in a Timely Fashion.
bottom on the tequila bottle and without all the sweat he used to sweat. And I didn’t stand up to write like he did (before he inevitably fell down, see photo), so maybe it isn’t the best comparison in the world. I could do better, but let’s move on.
I wasn’t writing the Great American novel, no. I was just writing my to-do list. Not in any theme or priority order, but just listing page after page of all I need to do.
There were big things, like paint the house, write the book proposal, raise two children, figure out how much I’m paying per minute for long distance once and for all, and provide input to the human genome project. There were also smaller items: find the missing sandal, get stamps, sharpen the knives, drink more water, and get my parking sticker at the university. There were literally hundreds of them, yellow brick legal pad roads of things that need to be done, rolling around in my head constantly, causing not so unconscious anxiety, what with their not being done and my teetering on the precipice of forgetting to do them, these important actions.
big pep rally leadership development program. And every year, we would host them for a reception at the national headquarters building, which meant one thing and one thing only: we had to clean up, as if Grandma (who starched and ironed her bed linens) was coming to dinner.
Like my Cardboardorama® in the 4th grade, my to-do lists seem to just loop around and around and around without end. The scene moves in front of me, but perhaps I’ve confused movement with action?
