A Place for Everything
Sometimes on mornings at home, in what I know is an elaborate form of procrastination, I tidy up before I begin writing. It's part compulsion. I like to look up from the screen and see some order in the universe — even if the order is only that I moved the covered rocking chairs from in front of the deck door so they don't block the view.
This morning while putting papers in the recycling bin and tucking a cloth bag up on a shelf where I keep shopping bags ... I thought about the phrase "a place for everything and everything in its place."
I'm a big believer in this. It's how I keep from losing things (including my mind).
The problem with this method is that I avoid the place where much of the stuff I'm moving should actually go — and that is what we used to call the circular file, the wastebasket.
So much of my tidying is a futile attempt to stem the flow. Until I purge — really purge — my tidying up will only be of the most superficial order. But this morning, like so many others, a superficial order is all I need.
There's a place for me, too — and it's sitting on this couch, typing on these keys.
This morning while putting papers in the recycling bin and tucking a cloth bag up on a shelf where I keep shopping bags ... I thought about the phrase "a place for everything and everything in its place."
I'm a big believer in this. It's how I keep from losing things (including my mind).
The problem with this method is that I avoid the place where much of the stuff I'm moving should actually go — and that is what we used to call the circular file, the wastebasket.
So much of my tidying is a futile attempt to stem the flow. Until I purge — really purge — my tidying up will only be of the most superficial order. But this morning, like so many others, a superficial order is all I need.
There's a place for me, too — and it's sitting on this couch, typing on these keys.
<< Home