Last week I had to cut short an interview I was doing for my new job when I realized I was going to be late to pick up my kids from school. The man I was interviewing on the phone was kind and gracious, but still, it was an awkward moment, and I felt like an unprofessional amateur.
As I sped down South Street toward the middle school, my cell phone rang, and I knew from the ring tone it was Rowan calling from the sidewalk outside his school, wondering where I was as he watched all the cars pull up to and away from the curb.
By the time I got home from the school pick-up circuit, dialed the manager I’d interrupted 20 minutes before to continue the interview, finished the conversation and hung up, I sat back in my chair, sweaty, flustered, and limp with defeat.
Cleary this new-job-work-from-home-be-a-good-mother-and-write-books-too endeavor was not going to work. Clearly I stunk as a professional, stunk as a mother, and, having struggled to string together ten creative words all week, stunk as a writer too.
No one has ever accused me of being glass-half-full.
That was Friday. On Sunday morning I ran the Lincoln Half Marathon. It was a great race, and I felt good the whole way — my breathing was easy, my body felt strong, and I finished in a respectable-for-me time. After I crossed the finish line, I went home, posted a Facebook photo of me with a medal around my neck and my number pinned to the front of my shirt, and celebrated by eating a great many delicious and unhealthy foods.
Later that afternoon, though, I remembered something important about that race, something the Facebook photo didn’t necessarily reveal, which is this:
I didn’t cross the Sunday morning finish line without days, weeks, and months of training first.
Our results-right-now culture has us programmed to expect instantaneous aptitude, but the reality is, doing a hard thing like starting a new job, becoming a new parent, walking through loss, or navigating a new season of life is a process that entails persistent work, growing pains, trial and error, and both small and large successes and failures along the way.
Case in point: My final training run for the half marathon was one of the worst training runs I’ve had in more than 30 years of running. It was so miserable, in fact, that afterward, as I lay on the sunroom floor in a heaving heap, I announced out loud to myself and the dog that I was done with half marathons forever. Two weeks later, I had one of my best races ever.
Last week was hard as I struggled to balance the new demands of work, parenting, home, and the creative life. I was hard on myself for failing to do it all perfectly, and I assumed that because I hadn’t succeeded right out of the gate, I wasn’t going to succeed at all. Luckily, a 13-mile race, the culmination of four months of training, reminded me that’s simply not true.
If, like me, you’ve been hard on yourself as you struggle through something big, hard or new, I want to gently remind you that big things, hard things, and new things don’t magically become small, easy, and routine overnight.
The Sunday morning finish line is wonderfully gratifying and a lot of fun, but the days, weeks, and months of two-steps-forward-one-step-back are what get us there. It’s the “pressing on” part, as Paul reminds us, that ultimately brings us to the prize.
Turns out, those hard beginnings and demoralizing middles might actually be the most important part of the race.
I also recently started working part time and am having a hard time accepting the necessary adjustments. I also recently got some difficult writing news. Yesterday I realized, in the wake of these changes, I haven’t really been very kind to myself. Taking the long-view (as you suggest) on change helps, kindness helps too. Rooting for you from the sidelines, Michelle.
I hear you, Kelly – transition is hard. And I am sorry about your difficult news, too. I really can emphathize. I’m rooting for you, too, friend – one step in front of the other…
I can’t agree with you more, Michelle! We don’t even get to the finish line until we’ve slogged through all the hard and challenging things “blocking” our run.
Blessings!
What a great reminder. Thanks for sharing!
So true. a lot of hard work, practice, mistakes, and trial and error goes into the finished product. Great reminder.
wow needed to read this today, Michelle. Thanks for sharing as honestly as you always do. Balance isn’t a static position it is ever recalibrating, repositioning. I love the image of practice, practice, practice and how often re fail or think we are failing just before a success. You’ve given me hope today
Michelle, your blog posts are always so real and honest and hopeful. And they make me smile–thank you!
I was having a conversation with a friend just yesterday about this balance of adjusting to the new and different and hard, and being easy on ourselves in the process.
Not 5 minutes ago I said to my husband, “why do we always make it about who finished fastest or first? it’s about who finishes, period.”
Of course, that’s not original, I’d read it somewhere else during the week.Then here you are, another sacred echo and an encouraging one at that.
I love the “results-right-now culture” paragraph! Thanks for speaking that truth. I appreciate your blog. whew! Congratulations on the Lincoln-half. I feel like a small part of me is missing because I chose to run in Independence, MO half instead. I’m still living vicariously through all my friends’ Lincoln experience. 🙂