tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2847325941297338110.post5883116391606084076..comments2023-04-26T03:04:43.609-06:00Comments on Sweet Yellow Bird: TimeElizabethhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16509978923215876056noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2847325941297338110.post-4056542999873049422017-08-02T01:04:28.421-06:002017-08-02T01:04:28.421-06:00Well said! Thank you :)Well said! Thank you :)Elizabethhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16509978923215876056noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2847325941297338110.post-79146966569880222712017-01-31T16:14:16.705-07:002017-01-31T16:14:16.705-07:00Yay! You're blogging again! I love the snippet...Yay! You're blogging again! I love the snippets from this article on how Minerva Teichart made time for her art:<br /><br />"But her main artistic outlet was her murals, to which she’d add strokes between chores. “She was a multitasker—big time,” says Wardle. “She’d be cooking at the stove and walk around [the corner] and put some brush strokes on the painting.” At night, once her children were asleep, Teichert gave her paintings full attention. She’d sometimes adjust the clocks to get them to sleep sooner."<br /><br />https://magazine.byu.edu/article/minerva-teichert/<br /><br />And this article made me realize I have to stop waiting for the ideal conditions before I begin working on my personal projects:<br /><br />http://project-based-homeschooling.com/camp-creek-blog/learning-to-use-time-you-have<br /><br />It's a work in progress but I'm trying to just seize the moments I have, however short, and trusting they will add up to a greater whole and that I will become better over time at making those moments go farther.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com