A friend posted a quote on Facebook that popped up on my
timeline the other day. It was attractively positioned over a lovely photo, and
at first glance, I didn’t have any problem with it. “If you think adventure is
dangerous, try routine. It’s lethal” -- according to Brazilian writer Paulo
Coelho. As I cleaned the stalls in the
barn like I do each morning, I mulled this over, and it began to stick in my
craw.
I love routine. Maybe I tend to elevate it too much,
thinking of the mundane daily tasks that frame my day as “rituals” or
“practices”. On the days when I am too
busy and have to forgo my usual routine, I feel off-balance and unsettled. Things are especially hectic around here
right now, with houseguests, graduation activities, trips to the city. Today is the first day I can sink back into
my beloved routines and take a deep breath.
Routine benefits the young, the old, all creatures big and
small. When I first moved here, one of
my neighbors told me that she feeds her horses at all different times every day
and night so that they don’t get conditioned to expect their food and become
too demanding or needy. I totally
disagree with her. In California, I got
wise advice from a kindly cowboy at the ranch where I kept my horses. He said
that if I wanted to have calm, easy to handle horses, I should feed them as the
sun came up and the sun went down, as close to the same time every day, because
that’s how they learn that they can trust me to be there for them. My dog, cat and horses can absolutely count
on it that at 6 am and 5 pm every day, they will see me with food in hand. Silk
and Siete often go to their stalls and peer out the doors at five o’clock when
their inner clock tells them that it’s time for dinner. If I glance out the
window and see those beautiful heads, I can almost set my watch by it.
The other day, my daughter and I visited my mom at the
nursing home and were surprised to find that the activities director had taken
her out with a group of residents to get ice cream at the local Dairy
Queen. We were delighted that she was
having a fun outing, but when they returned, my mom was distressed. She asked me, “What is this place? Is it a dorm?”
I had to explain that this is where she lived.
We were pretty freaked out, thinking that her dementia had caused her to
slide a little further down the slippery slope. She usually enjoys walking us
to the elevator to say good-bye when we leave. This time, she told me that she
didn’t want to because she was afraid she wouldn’t be able to find her way back
to her room. I was so sad and worried when I left her. On the way out, I spoke
to my mom’s favorite nurse about it, and she told me that routine was the most
important part of keeping dementia patients stable and content. I was relieved that the next day, with
everything back to the schedule she was used to keeping, my mom was tracking
normally again and she has been okay ever since.
Even my eighteen-year old, ready-for-adventure daughter
confessed to the need for routine. She
missed her “couch time”, she told me this weekend, after a particularly
exciting but demanding week. The routine of
sitting next to her dog, wrapped in a cozy blanket, reading and writing and
fooling around on her computer is a necessary anchor to ground her.
I find that in the
rhythm of the mundane tasks, imagination has time to percolate. One might say
that being stuck in a routine makes you feel trapped and suffocated, as Paulo
Coelho implies in that quote. I believe
that denying your creativity and not using your imagination is what really
makes you feel stifled and frustrated. Routine is the secret ingredient that
offers the security and space to let my best ideas develop and fly.
5 comments:
I agree with you. I don't like to rock the boat too much either. Feeling grounded and secure in a routine helps me get more things done than running around like a chicken without a head.
Apparently, my dogs like their routine too. If I'm busy around 5:00 they will come and find me, point to their wristwatches and tell me it's dinner time. The horses also have their feeding and turnout routines. I do believe it makes them feel secure and cared for.
I'm with you and Grey Horse. Our animals know what time it is and since they are dependent upon us it only seems fair that they have that sense of security. For the past 34 years you could walk into our barn and it would look the same. Aisles swept, stalls clean etc. There is something very satisfying about knowing the routine was completed and that the horses benefit from those efforts.
A lovely reflection and so interesting to consider. Just this morning I recognized that I've been craving more routine to help me balance working full time, my precious horse time, and my (also precious) relationships. I guess I think of routines as both a tool and a comfort. As long as you don't become mired in them, room for adventure is still possible within the rhythm of routines. And besides, once you get on a horse, there are new adventures every time!
I am with you. I need routine and all my pets do including my chickens and ducks. Maybe some people dont need it as much but I think animals really do.. I may need to jump out of routine was in a while but when I do i savor me something familiar. My father-in-law has dementia and he is still living at home with his wife of 67 years all because a family member helps them - but the fact he is at home in a house hes been in for 50 years is so helpful to him. Thank you for posting!
I think we all - humans and non - crave routine and structure. I wouldn't dream of leaving my critters hanging at mealtime...
Feeling reassured that the basics will be attended to day in and day out, allows space and energy for creativity / self-expression, not the other way round, imho. :D
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