Nothingness

“Sit down, it’s Sunday.” My husband encouraged. 

“But if I do,” I explained “things won’t get done.”

“There’s always something to do.” 

I looked around at the smudges on the walls I’d been meaning to scrub, the tiny toys under the living room furniture and that dead moth that’s been trapped inside our family picture frame for literal years. 

I’d changed five sets of sheets, scrubbed two bathrooms and vacuumed but the list never ends.

One of my friends shared a photo of her rewriting worn recipe cards and I remarked, “How do you find the time?” She suggested that perhaps it was the two less kids.  

Maybe so. 

Or maybe I just need to slow down. 

Life in perpetual motion is never dull but also exhausting. 

Where’s the time to appreciate the exquisiteness of nothingness?

So I sat and ate my new box of girl scout cookies wondering all-the-while if that moth would fully decompose before I took the time to remove it. 

Maybe so. 

Clearly, I have more important nothingness to do. 

I captured this man soaking up the sunshine on my fortieth birthday trip to Savannah, GA. Perhaps I could learn a thing or two from him!

Less is More

There is such a thing. 

As too much of a good thing.  

Be it chocolate, exercise or overpacked schedules full of fun. 

At some point, you burn out.  

Why must we get that point to learn the hard way?

Case in point: I developed an eye twitch a couple of weeks ago.  

Gee, here’s a new thing- I can’t control my eye spasming!  

A quick google search revealed the most common cause: STRESS.  

When the balls start dropping, it’s time to reevaluate which ones we can let go. 

Otherwise, we are failing at juggling.  

I’ve since slowed way the hell down.  

Learning to say no, when I desperately want to say yes.

Rushing less and relaxing more. 

In other words, 

Less is more.  

Camille Vaughan Photography