A Time For Every Purpose

All my life, I have been a teacher, from my late teens giving conversational English lessons to European students in the summer holidays to the present. I have taught every aspect of my subject: basic literacy, university literature surveys, creative writing and all the British English exam courses. And it has been a privilege.

Teaching is more a vocation than a profession, since to do your job well, you must invest much more than your time. Each student is precious and you want them to do their best. You worry about their progress; you worry about their sometimes chaotic personal lives; you worry that you are doing a good enough job. Like the old fashioned report card, teachers often feel that they ‘could do better’.

The upside is that all that preparation, grading and teaching helps young (and sometimes older students) flourish, pass exams and gain confidence.

Time’s winged chariot’ Image: Jon Tyson on Unsplash

Teaching is intense. It requires passion and love. It is also exhausting. So now that I am nearing sixty and my health not so great, I think it is time to bring things to a close. My last remaining student finishes in June and then I shall retire.

Time may change me, but I can’t change time

It has been a hard decision. I have always loved teaching and disposing of literally decades of work is emotionally fraught. I have endless files stuffed with notes and handouts. They all need to be emptied: the paper to recycling; the files to the charity shop.

On file Image: Karen Costello-McFeat

Every so often I come across a handout that I had taken particular care over and am hurtled back to teaching that very lesson. One could easily become maudlin in this enterprise. So much of my life is held in these folders. Should I dispose of them? Yes. Time moves forward, not back. Tempting though it is to keep my files, I realise that their physical presence is a sort of anchor weighing me down and holding me in the past.

Taking the band-aid approach, I ruthlessly rip papers from their sleeves and read as little as possible. As the files empty and the recycling bin fills, a wonderful feeling of lightness suffuses me.

Teaching materials Image: Karen Costello-McFeat

Late middle age is a period fraught with change. Children leave home, niggling health issues appear, and we become acutely aware of our mortality. Yet, in so many ways, these are the golden years when we can finally indulge ourselves a little.

My husband has been doing mountains of research on retirement lately and one of the hardest issues to address is what to do with all that time. Some simply can’t contemplate it and work till they drop. Others relish their freedom only to find that it soon seems empty and slump on the sofa watching daytime TV. Ideally, you want this stage to encompass all the interests that were deferred while working. But it does take some planning.

The Marie Kondo method

When contemplating any change, I find the Marie Kondo method works for me. Does my job, dress, social activity spark joy? If the answer is yes, cherish it. If the answer is no, let it go.

What we do habitually is not always what is best for us and using this simple method can help us sift through what we really value. As we empty our lives of emotional or physical clutter, we give room to new options.

And yes, change is scary. So I am trying to make my changes one at a time.

In fact, they are not so much changes as redirections. One of the things I loved most about teaching was reading – but dissecting books is no longer appealing. Now, I want to enjoy them as the entertainment they were meant to be.

Teachers also have to be permanent students. We research our topics, try to keep up to date and learn alongside our pupils. Here again, I can continue my studies but with a much greater range. I am studying art history, languages and would like to return to my music.

I want to write for pleasure and not for handouts. Teaching has certainly helped hone these skills, but now I want to dedicate them to a different purpose.

Interestingly, my life is coming full circle. Everything I loved as a child: art, stories, music and nature are exactly what I wish to fill my time now. My second childhood begins!

The two-pronged approach

These last weeks, I have discovered that all change requires a two-pronged approach. First, we must assimilate the change mentally. This takes time and shouldn’t be rushed. (Again, asking if it sparks joy will give you an answer if you feel conflicted.)

Second, change comes in its physical form – the throwing away of old files or the rethinking of a room’s layout. While doing the ironing, my husband realised that our lounge could be better arranged. We moved the desk to the window and the chairs to either side of the hearth. The centre of the room’s attention is now the fireplace rather than the TV; my writing area is exclusive to me with the most appealing outlook. Such small changes can yield significant results.

A room with a view Image: Karen Costello-McFeat

Making the most of my time

Living with a progressive, degenerative condition, I am acutely aware of the limited time available to me to do the things I would like. There are periods, I admit, that I rail against the injustice of it, but mostly this compression acts as a spur. I do not have ‘all the time in the world’. I need to get on. The only time I can rely on is now. And now, after all, is all anyone has.

A Well-Earned Rest

To say the last few months have been busy would be an understatement. They have been exciting, gregarious, exhilarating and exhausting. So much has happened in such a short time that my head is struggling to process it all. Unfortunately, my body is fully aware and like an overworked mule, refusing to cooperate further.

It all caught up with me at the weekend. Hermione had been badly bitten in the puppy park (she should be fine), Mariia had a wobbly over distressing news from Ukraine and well, I was running on empty. It was time to rest.

And so to bed! Image: Isabella and Zsa Fischer on Unsplash

Time to rest

We all need to schedule rest into our lives and I, like most folks, tend to forget that. And so we struggle on until no amount of caffeine or cat naps will do. We simply need to stop. With MS, this can be a little abrupt. One minute you are fine, the next your legs lose power, you feel dizzy and need to sit down before you fall. Chronic fatigue is extremely inconvenient when you have other more exciting plans. Perhaps you can stretch it a bit (as I did over the summer) but eventually it will come back to claim you.

Though I confess to failing on most points of moderating my downtime, I have maintained a very strict sleep schedule. I am always in bed by ten and up around 8.30am. Yup! Ten hours is what I need. Well, ten hours of rest at least. Sleep is not always guaranteed, but lying quietly will do me fine.

Like a koala, I am happy to sleep on any horizontal surface Image: David Clode on Unsplash

No regrets

Am I sorry that, in engineering parlance, I have tested myself to destruction? Absolutely not. I would not have missed a single day of this wonderful summer. However, I am aware that all good things must come to an end – or at least a pause.

Strangely, this hectic season has brought its own satisfactions. Bed lover though I am, I have never been quite so delighted to head upstairs in the evening as I have these last months. The gentle weight of the the duvet pressing down on me, a pillow cradling my head and relaxing dim light all feel like great luxury when you are really tired. Because when the day is filled with adventures, rest is a welcome respite. Days not so fully filled make bedtime a bore.

Unearned rest

Because the great irony is that too much free time and too much rest is bad for us. Our society is obsessed with leisure. We are encouraged to have endless days where nothing is expected of us and our every need is filled. It is the message behind all those adverts for exotic holidays, convenience foods and time-saving appliances. Have more time to yourself and you’ll be happy they say.

Heaven? Perhaps. But there’s not much to do. Image: Maarten van den Heuval on Unsplash

Except you won’t. Only poorer. Those wealthy enough to live a life of luxurious liberty are seldom content. The briefest look at the history of the leisure class would tell us this. These lives are filled with alcohol, drugs, affairs, gluttony and general bad behaviour – anything to keep the threat of boredom away. We are not designed to be idle.

Worse, those imprisoned in idleness have almost invariably bought their leisure with the price of another’s miserable labour. This is the greatest irony of all and has caused immeasurable suffering across the world. The Roman reclining on his coach being fed grapes in his centrally heated room does not have to witness the sweltering slaves below him.

The good life? Scene de banquet, fresco Herculaneum

Fortunately, our own lives do not come at such a direct human cost – though we are wise to remember that there is always a cost to someone or something; if nothing else to the earth itself.

Yet we still aim for the life of leisure, whether is it briefly – in the form of a holiday, or completely – in early retirement. We work hard, we save, we dream, but when we attain our goal, it is often different from what we expected. Perhaps we arrive at our exotic location too tired to move from the sun lounger to explore our location or perhaps our retirement brings its own question of what to do with an endless stretch of days. Or worse, when we reach it our health is too poor to enjoy it.

Rather than seeking the extremes of total work or total leisure, perhaps we should look for a balance of the two so that when we go to bed at night we are healthily tired.

Striking a balance

I do too much. I know that. Today I am in my track suit bottoms and cosy hoody because I need to rest. I’m not 100% well and hope this respite will fight off the cold that wants to overwhelm me. I need to push back and find space for repose and for myself. (A brief trip to Birling Gap yesterday to write felt as joyful as a vacation.)

I need to reinstate my yoga and breathing exercises that were side-lined with my son’s arrival and then Mariia’s. We need to insist on rest as ardently as we insist on leisure. Because we need both. Adhering to the 24/7 work culture will only result in ill-health and burn-out. Aiming for a life of leisure results in a fatuous existence.

When we have purpose in our lives and fill our days with whatever ignites our passion, whether that be helping others, work, creativity or play, we fall into bed at night satisfied at a day well lived. And if we don’t find our balance today? There is always tomorrow. But for now, I’m off for a nap.