In the span of my life so far, I’ve spent zero weeks writing full-time, zero getting paid to write and zero exploring my long-imagined side hustle of voice acting.[5] (Considering this, I’m more than proud of the scant week I’ve managed to put into learning to drive a powerboat.) The unshaded daylight of such blisteringly frank accounting leaves no space to hide behind my robust assortment of excuses: “I’ll get to it,” or, “when the kids are older,” or, “once my health is a bit more dialed in.” There are no guarantees I’ll get to anything, that I–or the kids, for that matter–will get any older, that any of us will be healthier tomorrow or next year.
Shining this unsparing light toward the future has proved singularly motivating: we get 939 weeks with each child before they (hopefully) go to college. Of those, we have around 208 left with Jack, 313 with Ali and 417 with Claire. We’re (fingers crossed…sort of) more than halfway through the time we have at home with each of our kids. For every week that passes, we have one less left with them. Yes, this observation may be the trite-ist of truisms, but how often do you really allow yourself to feel it? What better way to appreciate every moment we have and to encourage ourselves to make the most of it than to acknowledge its finite irreplaceability among an ever-dwindling supply?
One unforeseen benefit of my new perspective is, well, perspective: when we’re going through something hard, like one child struggling with insomnia, another relentlessly lobbing a bracing litany of cranky, keen-edged tween unkindnesses at any family member in range, or another betraying our trust-based system and sneaking hours of extra screen time, we know that these challenges are finite, too. We might spend eight of those 939 weeks helping someone remember how to sleep, or 20 coaching our verbal pugilist to rediscover her inner non-combatant, but these labors, too, will pass. Knowing that you’re in a moment you’ll never get back with your child can help you appreciate even the most heartrendingly difficult among them (moments, I mean, but, I guess, kids, too).