Anonymous wrote:One big change in how I relate to others: I assume good intent until proven otherwise. Keeps me from walking around generally vaguely pissed off and defensive. Also I prioritize sleep and real down time over almost everything.
Anonymous wrote:I stopped being flaky and stopped being late.
I started investing in my friendships more. I live overseas and my friends are all scattered around (my closest friends live in NYC, DC, SF, London, and Shanghai) and these long-term friendships are really important to me. I make a point to reach out and see how everyone's doing regularly.
I raised my standard of cleanliness for my home. By keeping the house neater, my mood tends to be better overall and I have more energy (I'm not kidding).
I'm already pretty minimalist, but now I regularly get rid of things rather than doing a big purge. More manageable.
I refuse to engage in drama with anyone, ever.
I stopped being self-deprecating. It's not to say I act like a cocky a**hole, I just started to realize my value and worth and no longer present myself that way.
If I don't feel it, I don't do it. Friendships, undertakings, books, whatever - life is too short.
Love this! What nationality are you... out of interest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I exercise daily, get biweekly manicures, spend a ton of time taking care of my skin and body, make sure my eyebrows are always groomed, and invest in mid-range nicer clothes and shoes (not high end, but not Old Navy or Loft either).
Do you have children and do you also work full time outside the home?
Np and I do all this, have multiple young kids but I SAH. Not sure if that makes it harder or easier.
Who watches the kids while you exercise and get mani/pedis?
Anonymous wrote:I started doing barre classes on my lunch hour at work. I have small kids at home so exercise before or after work is too hard.
I stopped buying clothes that 'almost' fit. If it doesn't fit absolutely perfectly (and is too expensive to get tailored), I return it. I now have a set of 10 work dresses from Nordstrom Rack, Neiman Last Call etc. that fit really well and that's two weeks of work outfits that I never have to think about. Just throw on dress and jewelry.
I got a robot vacuum and now I don't get annoyed walking on crumbs every day. I run it in the middle of the night.
Anonymous wrote:Everything goes on my calendar. As soon as I think of something, I calendar it out. So it's not a vague "check tire pressure" or "buy present for nephew's birthday" on some to-do list, it's put it on the calendar in a realistic time frame. If I need to reschedule the time, fine, but it is a block of time that gets moved.
Anonymous wrote:I am a black thumb city person. Started a garden reno and plant pretty things. Hated it at first, but over couple of years it grew on me so much that it became the best way to relax. It is very peaceful activity and garden forums are so friendly, I enjoy interacting with people there.
I stopped pushing myself to other people standards (read "rat races") and distanced myself from toxic competitive "friendships". I don't need to hear "oh, you renovated your kitchen? I have to top it when I redo mine!"
I choose people who talk to my very heart, whom I click with, and things that make me smile - $$$$ and not at all.
I started running with my faithful partner, my dog, go out with a few but real friends who will take a bullet for me (mutual), and devote more time to my BF.
Life became good.