Last Friday, my recent struggle with morning times reared its frustrating head.
I was planning on a bike/strength workout combo in the basement around 6:30, but I hadn’t told Ben, my then-16-year old, that was my plan. (Because, quite frankly, why would he care?)
Meanwhile, Ben, who normally leaves for school around 7 for his singing group that rehearses at 7:30, hadn’t told me his rehearsal was canceled at the last minute. (I care about things like that, but the teenager is sparse with his words.)
As I typically do these days, I missed my 6:30 appointment with myself. I laid in bed and drooled and listened to the morning news. Finally, clad in bike shorts, I walked down the stairs around 7:40 to our basement/gym. Ben was busy weaving a spider web for his birthday party on Saturday night. There was already purple and green yarn strung through my bike, resistance bands, and other workout equipment.
I had a choice: either go to the real gym to get my endorphins flowing or forget the endorphins, walk the dogs, and transition to work.
Choice A: a good one, but would leave me with not a ton of time for individual work: I had meetings from 11-3:30. Plus, the dogs would get 20 minutes, not 45.
Choice B: also a good one, because I am (by far!) most productive in the mornings, but would leave me with no super bloom of positivity, which I need to inject regularly into my spirit.
I chose A. The rest of the day flowed smoothly.
So what’s the problem, you might ask? The fact that I had a choice. Yes, friends: Freedom is what’s making mornings hard for me these days.
Indeed, choice is making my life feel murky, which may sound wrong to those of you who love a day with no agenda. But if you’re like me, who appreciates the school year more than summer break, you probably feel my pain.
Back in the day, when I was the lunch maker, the other-shoe finder, the homework signer, the carpool driver, my days had definite structure and many points of purpose. That structure did start painfully early, mind, but it set up the rest of my day for success. (See above: endorphin super bloom.) If I wasn’t out running by, say, 5:45 am, I wasn’t running that day. Given my glass-half-empty disposition and mental restlessness, that wasn’t a wise choice.
So I ran more days than not, then spent the rest of ping ponging between work and kids and house and, around 6:30, collapsing to watch Wheel of Fortune with the rugrats, who thought I was brilliant because I could solve the puzzles with half the letters turned. One day, I thought to myself as Vanna lit up letters with the touch of her hand, I will have more time to myself.
As it happens, that one day is now here. One kid is in college and texts mostly to ask if she can charge Chipotle, and one kid is a high school junior with packed days that provide plenty of—dare I say it?—structure.
I have what I lusted after when I was piloting a minivan wearing sweaty capris: a relaxed morning with few tight commitments. (And I also have two near-adult kids who are doing well—something, I realize, shouldn’t be taken for granted.) With all this freedom, I should be writing another book, I should be meditating for more than 7 minutes, I should be learning to knit or tackling the classics or expanding my culinary range beyond tacos and chicken curry. I should at least be rejoicing in the silence.
But I’m not. As I lie in bed drooling and hitting snooze as I try to solidify a fulfilling plan for my solo mornings, I am longing for the 36-things-on-my-list-starts-with-a-sweat days. I mean, maybe bringing surprise birthday cookies to a 6th-grade class isn’t really a higher calling, but those kind of tasks cemented my day, my schedule, and a big part of my identity. I miss them.
I, like every other parent, has been in this kind of transition before. I made it out, and I can do it again. (Plus, I kinda have no choice: time is not stopping. Ben is now 17.) Transitions are messy and longer than I typically want them to be, but I know the best way to find a groove in this new chapter is by building schedule that doesn’t just rely on my willpower.
On Tuesdays and Thursday, I lead a virtual strength circuit for Many Happy Miles. Those are my smoothest mentally. I show up because I said I was going to show up. I get similar good-morning vibes when I sign up for a virtual group ride on Zwift. I mean, nobody really knows me or cares if I show up, but having a specific time with a chosen workout gives me enough oomph to rally.
What I need to fill in the gaps are more hiking dates with friends (going 10 miles with Katie on Saturday reminded me how quickly time passes when conversation flows), more bike rides with Grant (which will happen as the weather starts to cooperate more), and at least one weekly class, TBD, outside my house.
None of this is terribly complicated or hard to execute. All it requires is a little more planning and a little less hitting of the snooze button. And Lord knows, I have plenty of practice in both of those areas.
How do you navigate transitions—or your kids getting older?
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Recently retired…(six years) and am loving the flexible “no schedule”- so I. make my own. Still up at four or five at the latest. Still in the pool or on the trainer/gym by five. Still sewing for various charitable organizations. Still playing with my ukulele group. Still setting those race goals also…fewer and farther between being almost 70 but honestly after 41 years of rushing off to work, and swimming at 7 p.m. while daughter was in ballet- well wouldn’t want those times back today! Embrace the change and quiet!
Hello Dimity! I relate to this so much! I am having such a hard time navigating a new life with my only daughter in college and my own new job in a new city.
“Transitions are messy and longer than I typically want them to be,” YES “but I know the best way to find a groove in this new chapter is by___________”
How we fill in that blank is key and individual, right?
I might observe (non-judgmentally ) that a list of “shoulds” (write a book, meditate, learn to knit, tackle the classics, etc.), which I am likewise prone to doing, feels like just another way to beat up on oneself.
All the feels! xoxo
I have had kids since I was 22 (I am almost 42) – my oldest in college, my youngest in 2nd grade – and because I never felt like a grown up on my own without kids, I long for the idea of travel and deciding how I will spend my evenings, when there won’t be PTA events to plan and long work days on top of it. I KNOW I will miss the business – I have been preparing myself for a long time – and I try to enjoy the relief as the older kids need me less and I get the messages and calls now that they identify with all of the life lessons I tried to instill. But I feel it coming. Making the transition from not being able to think about anyone else but the kids to only having to worry about what I need to do…I feel you Dimity. As always, your insight is perfectly expressed.
But what I need to know is what will happen with that spider web?!
I am here in that place where the kids have been on their own for a couple of years, but due to other life changes and the pandemic, never felt adrift from not having to deliver the cupcakes or attend the band concert. But, two months ago my husband retired at a really young age and now after 29 years of being a “single mom” or on my own in the mornings due to his early work schedule, I’m here bumping into another person and it doesn’t matter if his work clothes or breakfast is ready to go. I feel a little adrift right now trying to get this new place in my life figured out. Thank you for reminding me to actively fill in the gaps I used to fill with mountains of kid laundry and evenings watching team sports.
Dimity I loved this post! It is a difficult place and I myself have lost the momentum in my early retirement. I think I need accountability. It is so easy to just NOT do what needs doing for myself and get distracted by other things.
Thanks for the candid pep talk.
My workout timing has changed each time there was a transition in my daughters’ (now 16 and 13) morning schedule. I went from evening runs with friends to morning runs from the bus stop to morning runs that include a few wake-up calls to the girls. I missed some dinners in the early years, but they have two parents for a reason. My husband missed the frantic mornings trying to get babies/toddlers/elementary girls out the door in a timely manner. (I think he won that one.)
It’s a constant shuffle. It seems that just as you are settling into a new groove, someone changes the song. I guess it’s all good as long as we keep dancing.
Also, I want to know WHY sweet Ben was building a spider web.
[…] and words spill out and I can’t really remember what I said. [Probably a lot of the sentiment from this post.] She listens and offers suggestions to integrate more of a meditative mindset, then we start to […]