Having just completed my third one-year sabbatical, there were a couple of things about it that surprised me.
The first is how much of this sabbatical I spent just catching up on maintenance and unfinished projects. When you take a break from "getting ahead", there is time to do those sorts of things.
The second is that even though our income was the same as the previous year, we had a number of financial challenges over the year that left us needing to make do and do without, much more than usual. Last sabbatical, I put some money toward a special crafting project--a homemade fiddle from a kit. This time, I did another special sabbatical project (which I will post about later), but for the most part I crafted and created using only materials that I already had, or ones that showed up unbidden on my doorstep. I made lots and lots and lots of things, but I never ran out of supplies.
For part of the year, I set my never-ending to-do list aside, and just did what needed to be done, or what I wanted to do. Other times, I went back to making lists, and went full speed ahead on Getting Things Done. I have a new baby coming very soon, and there was a lot that needed to be done beforehand.
Spiritually, I have spent a lot of time reading George MacDonald novels, and I have been learning a lot from him. (He has been a significant influence on C. S. Lewis and other Christian writers).
I also put some effort into making wish lists this
time...sometimes I get so used to using what I have and doing without,
that I forget to think about what I would actually like to get. What is
remarkable, looking back, is how many of those things that I listed actually showed up, one way or another. Some things I was able to buy, some things I was able to make or improvise, other things I realized that I didn't really want after all, and a number of things were handed down to me, unasked-for. It sounds like The Secret's "law of attraction" at work, but I don't believe in that; I believe in a God who loving and gracious. George said, in one of his books, that no desire is too small to set before God, who will purify it.
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The book I wrote after my second sabbatical year, The Serendipitous Sabbatical: Rest in Unexpected Places, can still be found here.
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