
Finding peace is hard, especially when you’re trying to just do normal life and all of these life-y things keep getting in the way, like taxes and graduation planning and navigating the shifting dynamics of a family with older kids, and some days, just figuring out what to make for dinner.
But I’m determined. I’m going to do it. I’m muddling my way through the muck and making mindful decisions about what will bring calm into my world.
This month I’ve been asking myself very specific questions to get to the root of what it takes to have peace. I have written them on post it notes and placed them in places I will see them — the dashboard in my car, the bathroom mirror, the refrigerator.
One of the questions I’ve posed is two parts: What do I need to invite into my life to find peace? What do I need to release?
The second half of that question has brought to the forefront a nagging that’s been in my soul for a long time, I just couldn’t name it. Ironically, I don’t think I could even see it behind all of the junk that I had piled in front of it.
I need less.
It’s not because it’s trendy right now. It’s not minimalism or KonMari or capsule wardrobes. It’s not adopting someone else’s prescription for what my possessions should look like.
It’s this deep seeded, almost primal need to strip myself of all that doesn’t reflect the person I am now or the path on which I’ve set myself.
I want to be surrounded by things that I love, not just things that were purchased to take up empty space (both in my home and in my heart).
I want to acquire less and appreciate more.
I want to lead a curated life, not a collected one.
I think that we creatives are hoarders by nature.
We hoard paper and yarn, fabric and memorabilia, trinkets and treasures, words and memories, heartache and tears.
We collect and store all of these things and, when the time is right, we take them out, examine them, turn them around in our hands and in our minds, rearrange them, and use them to make something new.
We create something that didn’t exist from things that did exist, something that reflects how we see the world.
We hoard and create to make sense of things.
It’s a messy, imperfect process, but a necessary one.
The problem arises when these possessions begin to define and devour us; when we begin to think that the next good thing will bring us to a place where we are everything we imagined we should be.
But it never works.
We will never find peace in the doing and acquiring and achieving and appeasing. We will only find peace in the being.
I think that finding peace is counterintuitive. While it seems like it should be effortless, it requires intentional, mindful living.
Peace is found in those crevices of nothingness between all of the doing.
Peace lives in the place of what we have and who we are, not what we want and who we think we will be.
Anything less leads to chaos.
Peace isn’t a thing you create, it’s a thing you claim.
And I’m claiming it.
I’m claiming it every time I choose to exist in the present instead of ruminating on the past or the future. I’m claiming it when I go for a walk or visit a museum or read a book for no reason other than it brings me joy.
I’m claiming it when I simply allow others to be who they are, not who I wish they were or who I expect them to be.
I’m claiming it when allow myself the same grace.
And in the quiet moments, in the times when I am alone with myself and shut out the noise of the world, in the brief glimpses of silence, I find peace.
Currently reading: Lilac Girls: A Novel by Martha Hall Kelly
Currently Loving: All things Scandinavian, including The Year of Living Danishly and all things Hygge
Currently Obsessed With: Diffusing lavender, sage, and eucalyptus essential oils. It smells like a spa!