52 Weeks 500 Words
This is how it began: Justine (not her real
name) decided to write 500 words (or as near as), anything goes, per week for 52
weeks. She would then submit it for anonymous posting, via me, her friend.
Perhaps a pattern will emerge from her words, but at this stage it’s more an
experiment I have agreed to share in. I’ll attempt to draw conclusions at the
end of this. Stay tuned if this resonates with you.
Week 47
"This past week ended up being pretty hectic and I didn’t
even get the chance to write properly in my private under-my-pillow journal.
There are a few functions happening in my area, with loads of charities getting
involved, and as I like to volunteer for good causes, I found myself a little
harassed by day’s end, and a lot tired.
So I did this: I wrote one word in my journal to describe
the day.
Looking back over five entries like that, I am surprised by
how much one word can describe so much. In that one word is a full day of
action, of emotion, of how I felt as the day ended.
Monday – frazzled
Tuesday – bone-tired
Wednesday – contented
Thursday – weary-happy
Friday – laughing
Okay, so some were two words J But do you see the
progression? It began with loads of set-up work and ended in the culmination
events last night, which went smoothly and everyone had fun. Later this
evening, we will pack it all up and I think my word then will be ‘exhausted’!
It was a good week. I made new friends and learned much
about people and their willingness to help others without expecting payment
other than the satisfaction of a job well done. This fills me with a glow. To me,
this means we are still good as humankind and we still use our humanity. This
is very special. If all of us would do something ‘extra’ no matter how small,
we can change the world.
A smile can change the world! Try it. As you do your weekly
shopping, pushing your trolley around crowded aisles, smile at someone. In most
cases that someone will actually smile back and both your worlds suddenly feel
brighter. This is very special also.
The one word entries led to a form of enlightenment, for
me. I realised we do not need loads of words to describe an emotion, that a
word can say so much even in singular. We do trip ourselves up, don’t we, when
we try too hard to say something. Too many words can lead to misunderstanding. On
the flipside, one word may say too little, so we need a happy compromise. And
this is what I will try in future, use my happy compromise. When busy, it’s one
word, but if I feel afterwards it needs more explanation, I’ll add something
more. At the very least, that one word serves as a reminder and becomes
something to build on.
I am so pleased life teaches us new ways all the time. And I
am so pleased to know we are able to make new connections simply by smiling and
lending a helping hand. Sometimes we live in an okay world!"
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