When unexpected mishaps get you out of your routine

It is actually great to have even small things go wrong. It breaks up routine. It forces you to use your skills of tolerance and control.

I stumbled on this sign during the COVID-19 pandemic and it has along resonated with me.

Today, on a warm sunny day, I headed to swim at the community center. It was rush hour. It took me 30 minutes to get there. Then, when I arrived, I learned the pool was closed for lifeguard training. I’ve never had that happen. So back home I drove, and got stuck in the late evening traffic jam from the hills of Portland to my home. It was slow, and it’s a drag on nice nights.

I used to sit in this traffic jam daily for nearly two years, when I drove 100 miles a day (there and back) to Salem, usually in the car more than three hours total a day. It was brutal on me. It was also a very hard time when my mom was near death and I was running on fumes. At that moment tonight, I felt blessed. I was now working at home, I am pretty good with my job, and my mom’s suffering has long passed. Her journey had ended, and that was good.

I needed this reminder to be thankful of how far things have come from those days of little sleep and a lot of stress. Here’s a little thing I spotted near my home a few years ago. It rings true for me.

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