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Memories Deserve More Than A Shoebox
TM
No Time To Scrap? Got A Minute?
by Rockester
I hear it all the time from scrappers of all types: "I need more hours in my
day," "I can't find time to scrap," "If only I could have a whole week to myself
to get organized," "I can't seem to get going on my books," "I haven't done a
page in months," and "I shop more than I scrap!" Common complaints, right? Have
you ever said similar things? I must admit I have often felt pressed for time
and my hobby is the first thing to flex. But if it flexes too often, we don't
get very far finishing pages do we? Let's figure out a way to have more TIME to
scrapbook.
The Problem:
Let me digress a minute and tell you a true story that happened to me this
summer. Renae (my neighbor and scrapping buddy) and I went garage sale shopping.
One of our last stops was at an estate sale to see what home furnishings there
available. (I am always thinking estate sales and so on for my 1940's Mary
Engelbreit style porch.) Well this one sale was so SAD! Know why? Because this
estate sale was for a person (a lady) had bought hundreds of items on QVC
shopping channel. Before she died, she had bought all kinds of stuff. Something
for every hobby under the sun and every gadget there ever was. There was no way
one person could ever do all the crafts and use all the items she had purchased.
Even if she had a lifetime to live over again, she could not have used all she
bought. It was for kitchen, garden, garage, household, hobby. Boxes stacked and
stacked every direction and place. Her grown children even said there was so
much more in the house that they were going to have to have ANOTHER sale the
next weekend. The children were trying to liquidate her "collection" of hundreds
and hundreds of boxes of unopened unused products because they did not want or
need any of it.
What inner need was she filling when she sat in front of the TV and ordered
those things. It was thing after thing after thing from QVC. And the thousands
upon thousands of dollars wasted. Her kids (age 35-55) were sitting there
selling the unopened QVC items in their boxes for whatever they could get back
out of it all. Probably 10 cents on the dollar if they were lucky based on the
pricing I saw. They had no use for all that STUFF...no room either. We walked
away shaking our heads. This lady had a real buying problem. Or perhaps she just
was overly optimistic about how much time she had to do it all? Either way, she
obviously bought and then did not DO!
Why am I telling this garage sale story in a scrapbooking article? You can
probably guess. It is back to the concept that our resources and time is
limited. Not only by our busy schedules, but also by the unexpected aspects of
life--like death. Sometimes I hear scrappers joke about "never getting caught
up" "working on my books from now to forever" or laugh off the dozen rolls of
film they just took to be developed. Sure we all know the hobby is just a hobby.
But it is also more than that. Isn't it a history of our family too? Don't we
really want to get caught up? Let's make it a priority to get more done. Let's
leave finished albums to our kids-- not boxes full of things we never got time
to finish.
Possible Solutions:
How you ask? Time is a basic element in life. We often think of time as
something that just goes by. Time is sometimes viewed as an element in life
beyond our control. (i.e. my several gray hairs! LOL) Often I will get up from
the computer screen or the TV set and be shocked to find an hour more has passed
than I expected. Has the deadline for a project at work ever snuck up on you?
And we all have had to deal with kids who forget time and stay on the playground
or the Nintendo or the IM too long. WOW! Where did I let that time slip by? I
wasn't paying attention to how I was spending my time.
Yet other times I am amazed at how productive I can be in an hour or two. A work
deadline is met with time to spare. The house gets tidy, the errands get
accomplished. How did I do that? Did time stand still? What was the difference
and how can I make my days and my time work for me and not against me?
We all know that we DO have some control over time. The control we have is how
we choose to spend our time. This is a lesson I learned from my
great-grandmother when I was 7. She was a pioneer type gal in Missouri. She
still did everything the old way even in 1967. (My mom on the other hand
believed in using modern conveniences you see so the contrast was apparent even
to a 7 yr. old) Great grandma would pluck chickens, cook from scratch, wash the
dishes by hand, churn butter, and hang out the wash. I must have been amazed and
asked her one afternoon how she did all that work and still had any time for
herself and her quilting.
Her reply was to take me by the hand and lead me to the linen cupboard. She took
out her dishtowels and sweetly explained that she made time for her love
(quilting) because on Monday you did the laundry and Tuesday you did the ironing
and Thursday you did your errands and shopping. You have seen those towels
reminding the gals of the daily chores. She explained that because she followed
a structure and a system with her time, she had time to do what she loved. Her
family grew to know her system and respect it and her time. She then made time
for her creative hobby.
I think I agree with her even today. Thank the Lord I don't have to pluck my own
chickens-- but I do have to manage my time. The only common thread on my most
productive days and weeks seemed to be that I made a list. I look at the
calendar and PLAN. I work my goals into the existing times in my week. I make my
goals (scrapbook time) a priority and I write them into my calendar. This is
especially important if you don't have a space to scrapbook where you can leave
the work up and do 5 minutes here or there. You need a bigger chunk of time to
take things out and get started? Then take the bull by the horns and WRITE IT
IN!
Breaking Scrapbooking Block and Finding more Time in a too-full Day!
1. Adjust your priorities. It's all about choices. If you're not
scrapping at all, it's because you've chosen to do something else. If you're
watching Big Brother or a rerun of Family Ties, get up and move away from the
TV! LOL This also goes for too much time in front of the computer screen!
2. Add it to the Family Calendar. I have found that writing it on our
family calendar also helps others in the family take it seriously. They see that
commitment on the calendar and about half the time they automatically find
another parent to carpool to the movies. If you are a morning person get up an
hour earlier twice a week to scrap. If you are an evening person, get busy twice
a week after the house is quiet. Maybe you can decide to go REGULARLY to local
scrapbook store crops and retreats and PLAN it in on the calendar. Hubby has
learned to make dinner on those nights. In order to get our scrapping done we
have to make time for it. Use the crock pot once a week, eat an hour earlier or
later and use the hour you saved to scrap right before or after dinner. This
kind of time will not fall into your lap.
Take control of your scrapping time. Make time for it. Look at this week's
calendar or this month's calendar and WRITE IT IN at least once a week. Give up
an email loop (not ours of course!) or a TV show that is getting dull.
Substitute a block of 30 minutes, an hour, or maybe two scrapping time for any
of those 'blank' times where you have caught yourself mentally saying "Well that
was a waste." Be proactive and manage your time the way YOU want . The time is
in our days. We just have to find it and grab it and use it.
3. Lower your expectations. You can't believe I said that? It is
true--You don't have to create a contest winner every time. My ratio of quick
pages to really nicer "stunning" pages is ten quick pages to one primo page. It
keeps me moving along and uses lots of the elements I have already bought and
want to use up. You can still create stunners. You will just have to do them
less often. My teenage kids have even said they would rather see the albums DONE
than wait for every page to be good enough for a contest.
4. Do something scrapbook related every day. Just sorting photos,
organizing the sticker binder, filing new papers, and cleaning your area will
help you work faster later. This does NOT mean go to more Bulletin Boards, and
scrap chat rooms! Each Bulletin Board you check takes an average of 20 to 30
minutes. Couldn't you be scrapping instead? Don't want to go cold turkey on your
buddies? Pick your favorite lists and stay on those but drop one or two others
and gain 20-40 minutes! Or check them HALF as often as you do now. See? You just
gained TWICE your current time to scrapbook!
5. Do one little thing. Sometimes we get mentally blocked because the
task ahead looks too darn big. Break it down into smaller parts and start with
the first photo or set of photos. Sounds too obvious, but the fact is, we let
ourselves get psyched out by the thought of doing a page, when all we really
need to do is start by picking colors or page additions!
6. Take Sketch Notes. Put a blank book in your purse or car and look for
ideas everywhere you happen to be. Look at billboards, magazine ads, pop cans,
and get ideas for color combinations and graphic designs. Do it while waiting
for the car pool. You don't have to be elaborate or an artist. Just sketch it
out so you can recognize what you had in mind. Use this book later when you need
a fresh idea or jump start.
7. Journaling is often a tough aspect to 'hurry". And really we don't
think you have to hurry it. But do use your writing time wisely. . Frequently,
we get blocked because we’re stuck by one idea or subject and we're reluctant to
get started. Take that title or photo or memory and in your blank book, free
associate or brainstorm. Write down every word you can think of relating to the
event. If some seemingly unrelated word pops into mind, put that down too. Later
sift through your words for a few key ones that relate to the original idea.
8. Momentum. Just push that ball down the hill and watch it roll! Take a
photo from your stack of unfinished pictures and scrap it, no matter what. It
doesn’t have to become a stunning layout--see what you can do in 30 minutes with
it. Try something new. Take out an idea book and copy a layout you love. That is
what they are there for! Try this with some of your average photos if you are
leery. Just do it and get the page done. You have thousands of pages to do.
9. Take a tea or water break every hour or so. Skip the caffeine and sit
back a minute or two or five and recharge the creativity batteries. Then go at
it again.
Feel motivated? Let's go scrap!
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