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Last night I did what I do every night as the day winds down: I mentally went through my day and noted all the things I didnā€™t get done. The list was long. Although the tasks should have been easy, they had been insurmountable. Chronic pain, disability-related muscle fatigue, and breathing difficulties can make regular work and family life feel like just too much. 

I felt like I had failed at life, and this was a familiar feeling because this is a familiar routine.  

I started thinking about neuroplasticityā€”the idea that our very thoughts can shape our brain. I know that choosing different thought patterns can reshape my brain, so I made the mental switch that I often do and started listing the tasks I did accomplish.  

I felt better, but it wasnā€™t enough. Either way I was equating completed tasks with success, which isnā€™t actually changing my thought patterns. I needed to move beyond checking off boxesā€”or notā€”in my mind.

I remembered listening to accessibility advocate Chantal Huinink at a conference years ago, and one of her points has always stuck with me: Just like we can be prone to perfectionism, we can also be hung up on productivism.  

That was an ā€œaha momentā€ for me. Whenever perfectionism has come up in sermons or seminars I have always felt a bit smug because thatā€™s not a struggle for me. Iā€™m comfortable with things being a bit rough around the edges. Iā€™m OK with things being a tad raw.  

But this concept of productivism that Huinink spoke about hit me hard. I am absolutely a productivist. I love lists and crossing things off. I multitask as much as possible, and my favorite pastime is knitting because even my leisure needs to be productive.

This is what I need to rewire in my brain. Being productive is satisfying, but is it where I want to derive my self-worth? What is more important than productivity? 

I remember a line from a training course at work: ā€œWe are human beings, not human doings.ā€&²Ō²ś²õ±č;&²Ō²ś²õ±č;

What does it mean to be a human being? How do I want to be

I knew the answer immediately.  

Love. To be is to love.  

Scripture tells me that ā€œif I have a faith that can move mountains but do not have love, I am nothingā€ (1 Cor. 13:2). Moving mountains would be the pinnacle of productivism and might even be a testament to oneā€™s faith, yet without love, it would be meaningless.

So I asked myself: Was I loving today

I mentally went over my interactions with people during the course of the day. Was I loving with my family? With my coworkers? With the friends I saw when we picked up our children from school? I carefully considered each scenario and evaluated my actions and attitudes. In some places I identified places to improve, but in others I could honestly answer yes. Yes, I had been loving. And whatā€™s beautiful about love is that it can be given and received. I had most definitely received love.

What a difference this realization made in my mental state as I closed out my day. Rather than feeling like a failure, I felt like I had succeededā€”and succeeded in a more meaningful way than if I had done the dishes (nope) or folded the laundry (partially).

So this will be my new routine. I will focus on being loving rather than falling into the trap of productivism, and I will reshape my brain until, I hope, my very being is oriented toward love.

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