One Thing at a Time
“Stressed” defined my days. Sure, partly tiredness was creeping in and adding tension, but it was more than that. While I was taking care of the laundry and meals and such, I also had all of these projects in my head that I couldn’t stop planning. I lamented my mere forty minutes a day (the length my daughter will sleep without me for her nap) in which I could sit down and knit, read, write, sew, etc., because I had so much more I wanted to do!
Then I read something in Jerry Bridges’ Trusting God, the book my small group is going through this semester, about the stress we feel when we have two conflicting agendas (ours and God’s) instead of one (God’s). The passage seemed to fit what I was experiencing. I thought, I need to get rid of the extra agenda in my life and just focus on God’s agenda for me.
But what does that look like? What is God’s agenda?
I don’t know exact details of God’s plan for my life down to the minute, obviously, and I don’t think we are even supposed to try to figure out “God’s will” and wait around until He gives us some kind of grand sign telling us exactly what the next step is. No; I must take care of daily needs of myself and family, do the best I can to prayerfully thank God for what He provides, and cultivate a gracious attitude towards myself and the people around me.
While I may not know God’s “agenda” for my life in a specific sense, here’s one thing I know: I can only do one thing at a time. God made me a finite human being, capable of truly focusing well on any one given task. When I spend my energy imagining a multitude of tasks I can’t reasonably accomplish in my allotted time, I’m being wasteful, and I’m not helping my attitude or my family. If instead I focus on enjoying the one thing that’s been given me to do in the moment (read with my daughter) or that I choose to do in my free time (knit a soft grey hat), I feel happier, and I feel more of a sense of fulfillment in whatever I’m doing.
For the past week or so, I’ve been hearing “one thing at a time” running through my mind, and the simplified approach has helped my attitude and emotional state, even though my circumstances have not changed. I’ve felt more productive, even though I’m probably not actually doing any more than I would have had my attitude not shifted.
Praise God that He asks us for simple (though not always easy!) things:
“Mankind, He has told you what is good
and what it is the Lord requires of you:
to act justly,
to love faithfulness,
and to walk humbly with your God.” (Micah 6:8)
Micah 6:8 describes God’s agenda for me and for everyone. How the agenda works itself out in the day-to-day, well, I hope I’ll answer that question one thing at a time.