
Contentment is one of those things that you never really master, is it? It seems to come and go. Right now I’m searching for it.
There has been a lot written on the internet about fighting comparison. Sure I deal with that from time to time: wanting my life to look a little more like hers, wishing my blog was as successful as that one or that I had the resources to pull off that project.
I’m searching my heart, though, and I think that I’m being truthful when I say that I don’t really play the comparison game too much. I know that we all have different struggles and we are all coming from totally different places and we all have different strengths. I actually love who I am and I love my life.
Sometimes I do fight off discontentment within myself, though. This is so silly, but usually it’s because there are things I want to spend money on that we can’t afford. For example, here are some specific things that if we had the extra funds, I would purchase:
- a real camera
- new workout clothes and shoes
- yoga mat + carrier
- weekly swim lessons for Meredith
- a good blender/food processor
- supplies to do a small reno on our kitchen & half bathroom and several other smaller DIY projects for the house
But the truth is that this is the most expensive time of life for us right now. We have two kids in daycare full time. We have a mortgage, student loans, and two car payments. We have good jobs with good benefits (which I am SO grateful for!!) but we aren’t raking it in. We are constantly trying to save money here and there, but in the end there isn’t a whole lot of saving going on. It is frustrating.
Over the weekend David and I went to tour Costco to see if it would make sense for us to join. We decided that if we had more freezer space it totally would. We have an extra fridge + freezer in our garage but the outlets don’t work there and never have, along with all the outlets in the bathrooms, so we were thinking that it would be worth it to hire an electrician. As we were pulling up at home later we saw some big tree branches down in our yard and realized that we also really need to get our trees trimmed.
“That’s another thing that costs money,” I said. “Everything costs money!”
“What do you mean?” David prodded.
“The electrician, the trees, a camera, and everything else I want.”
“Maybe we just need to work on not wanting so much,” David suggested gently.
I knew he was right. How do you do that, though? I’m not asking rhetorically. I really don’t know.
For me it seems to come and go in cycles. I try to focus on what I have and stay busy and eventually I get to a place where I feel fine the way things are. Prayer helps. So does going outside.
How do you fight for contentment?
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