Friday, January 21, 2011

Nature Abhors Them -- But They're Necessary Once in a While

Today was what I call a Day of Vacuum.* A Day of Vacuum has nothing to do with housework; rather, it's a day when lots of things go wrong, when you screw up repeatedly or get called on your screw-ups deservedly, when painful and annoying things happen, and they all pile up at once. For instance, my day included missing my train both going to and coming from work; being lambasted by someone whom I wronged, and deserving it; sending a group e-mail to important people with an incorrect e-mail address, thanks to autofill, and having to correct it (e.g. sending another e-mail acknowledging I did something stupid); writing catalog copy; a dentist appointment for a filling; another painful personal procedure; worrying about an issue related to my book I should have resolved months ago; being reminded of the endless and ever-growing list of things I have not done and need to do; and on and on. . . .

The main redeeming feature** of this day was that once I realized it was going to be a Day of Vacuum (after the lambasting, when I remembered the dentist appointment), I DECLARED it was a Day of Vacuum, thus embracing the vacuum. And this encouraged me to deal with lots of little vacuumy tasks I've been putting off for a while, and now they're done. The personal procedure, for instance: I chose to do it, because hey, it's a Day of Vacuum. Or when something else went wrong, I shrugged: Day of Vacuum. Once you accept the vacuum and you have this motto, then the refrain becomes almost a comfort: It reminds you that it's just one day, and it will pass.***, ****
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* [Actually, I call it a Day of Suck, but my mother wouldn't let us use the latter word in its slang sense when I was a teenager, so my sister and I replaced the word then with "vacuum". And in deference to her sensibilities (hi, Mom!), I'll use that term in this post.]
** The other redeeming features: I finished a second-pass line-edit, when the book is more or less in focus and the rest is all pulling the pieces together; excited about a revised manuscript; my filling didn't hurt or require Novocaine . . . and getting to blog, I guess.
*** Or, to put a kidlit spin on it: Today was a difficult day, but tomorrow will be better. (Even in Australia.)
****
ETA: After I posted this at nearly 1 a.m., I decided to knock off one more task and write an e-mail regarding the program for an upcoming writer's conference. Finished it, hit "send": The computer system ate it. At which point there was nothing to do but go to bed to make the day be over.

7 comments:

  1. Is there such a thing as a month of vacuum? For the past few weeks it seems everything I touch, from coaching my daughter's bball team to teaching a Sunday school class at my church, I've managed to screw up royally in one way or another.

    Good to hear other people are experiencing misery too. :)

    Strangely it does make me feel a bit better...

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  2. Great post. Perspective is such an incredible thing - it can change everything.

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  3. I love your use of the word, vacuum, that is all. :)

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  4. I hate it when that happens! I had a year of vacuum last year, and it seems to be continuing this year. I'm glad I'm not the only one who has these hard times, including dental appointments.

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  5. Thanks for sharing how you handle those of days. Because we all have them. I know I do. I tend to stew about them and lose lots of sleep until I get over it and realize I'm not perfect and no one is.

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  6. Having a day of vacuum myself, but already feel better after adopting the phrase :)

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  7. Oh good! I'm not the only one who grew up in a house that had about twice as many swear words as everyone else's.

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