Enjoy the little things in life…for one day you’ll look back and realize they were the big things. (Robert Brault)
I can truly echo this statement, for through my own experiences I have learned the importance of looking for and enjoying the little things as they happen. We cannot recapture the moments and time moves forward whether we want it to or not. What we do not appreciate and enjoy now can only be remembered later.
Even when we know we should be enjoying the little things we do not always do so. We may be so focused on something else in the moment that we barely react. A mother, busy tying a shoe for a toddler may offer her cheek for a goodbye kiss from a spouse or another child as they leave, accepting the action as something small and routine for each of them. The underlying steady love, appreciation and support may not fully be appreciated until later, when the children or spouse are no longer willing or present to share their love on a daily basis.
In our busy, active lives we schedule the activities and appointments that demand our attention or we are afraid may be forgotten. While these places to be and things to do seem of the most importance, it is really the small things, unwritten, occurring between the lines that end up being the big things, the things remembered. . Making sure you get the child to the game on time is important, right now, but what he will remember isn’t whether you made it early or late, but rather the talks that occurred during those rides or the ice cream after a loss. Your daughter won’t remember whether you were late for a parent-teacher conference or a dance lesson but she will remember hearing you express your pride in her for the talents and skills you know she has.
Sometimes it is our perceptions that hamper us from enjoying the little things. As a mother, you pick up the crayons and torn crumpled piece of paper with what to your adult eyes appears to be nothing more than scribbles of lines and shapes with no meaning. To you it is simply another piece of paper to be thrown away, until the little boy comes running in. He is excited you found his drawing and boisterously explains what the lines, spaces, shapes and colors represent. A small piece of paper changes, with understanding, into his masterpiece for the day, a true work of art to be cherished.
As our lives change we realize some of the small things we may have taken for granted in the past. A frazzled mother, surrounded by screaming toddlers racing past her, looks back to a time when they slept peacefully for hours at a time, or forward a few hours to the hope of the quiet after bedtime. The father who reluctantly played catch with a little boy one night now stands surrounded by the trophies the gift of a few minutes resulted in. An aging grandparent reminisces about days of cookie covered tables, paper creations and chocolate covered faces as she listens on the phone to a grandchild tell her about his latest school project.
At times we simply do not appreciate the little things until we recognize that the small things we take for granted are or would be the big things to someone else. A father complains about how expensive it is to feed and clothe a child until the childless couple next door asks if he will allow them to be a Secret Friend because they just want to share their love with the children they know and care about. A mother apologizes for the crayon and sticky fingerprints on the wall and the toys on the floor until the visitor she thought she needed to impress begins crying and explains she lost a child to illness and wishes she could experience the wonder of wall art, growth prints and learning objects again.
Whether small or big, I encourage us all to experience these things now. Enjoy the moments of your life now, and reflect joyfully on them later.
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