Within our little family business, this is the time of year when I typically look back, look ahead, and ponder things that I want to change: a hundred little inefficiencies; tools I don't like; tools I want more of; three dissatisfied customers during the year, each with a common denominator. Like contractors all over the Cape, I'm not getting younger, and so I also look for ways to make my job easier.
Then, I zoom back a little. Our household is adjusting to higher prices for everything... sometimes shockingly higher. One of my favorite customers just confided that she'll likely be selling her house and moving to Maine, as the Cape - her home for many decades - has become simply unaffordable. That's become a common tale. And on the other side of the transaction, I've never been busier with exterior cleaning. I'm sad to look back and realize how little time I spent actually conversing with my customers this year, as I was so often running to the next job... sometimes literally. The pressure to "squeeze in more work" was ever-present in 2022.
I didn't take my annual hiking trip in the White Mountains this year. I didn't catch a fish this year, and hardly tried. I sold my boat because the old joy in it just wasn't there. Alex is now 15. In another minute, he'll be 19, then 30.
This past week I caught up with an old friend and learned that he tried to kill himself this year. I had no idea he was struggling; at the time, I was furiously cleaning the outside of mid-Cape rental properties so that incoming renters wouldn't wrinkle their noses at algae on the decking or mold on the siding and (gasp) deduct a star from the rental's AirBnB review.
Once upon a time, there was time. Time to converse with and get to know my customers. Time to converse with friends and family in detail, rather than in headlines. Time learn about my customers, time to watch the tide go in and out, and time to listen to the whispers of intuition. It's time to get back to that space.
Yes, it's easy to sit here on a quiet night in late December and say, "I'm not going to get so stressed out and wrapped up in 2023." That's easy. But I'm publicly making this commitment to staying more grounded and focussed on what really matters, and I'll refer back to this page as 2023 unfolds.
How will I know if I'm successful? For starters, reflecting back on the year in late December 2023, I won't feel like I do now.