So while I was at my sister's home earlier this month, I was treated to a sleepover with her cat, Motor. And I don't use the word treated lightly, because Motor typically won't give me the time of day, so when he crawled into bed with me, I considered it the cat's meow!
Click on Motor's portrait to read What Motor Knows. |
After a steam and a shower, I was feeling like a queen in her castle that night, in my sister's loft, with Motor snuggled in next to me, a good night's sleep knocking on my door, until . . . Motor started to snore.
And not just soft, serene snoring, either. He gurgled and gulped and sniffed and snorted. At first, I figured he was just getting comfortable, then I thought maybe he'll stop once this bad dream he must be having passes, but, the way I remember it, Motor pretty much snored into the wee hours of the morning. (Unfortunately, we won't have time to talk about
how I feel about snoring in this particular post!)
Excited to find out if Motor had actually stayed up there with me, Debra's husband asked the next morning how it went. I simply responded, "Motor Snores!" I don't know if it was my tone or the bags under my eyes (or both) that prompted his inquiry, but it kind of took whatever wind I had left out of my sails:
Is that an observation or a complaint?
You see, at this time last year, I was reading this book - A Complaint Free World by Will Bowen - and Rick and I had talked at length about complaining, how we felt about it, why people do it, how we've aspired to stop, and whether wearing a bracelet on your wrist to help you remember NOT to complain would really work. The idea behind the book's 21-day challenge is to put on the purple wristband, switch it to the other wrist every time you complain, and see if you can keep it on one wrist for
a 21-day consecutive stretch.
a 21-day consecutive stretch.
The book made me SO much more aware of the toxicity of complaining. And, while I didn't mean to complain about Motor, necessarily, there were so many more uplifting things I could have chosen to focus on instead of making the observation that sounded an awful LOT like a complaint. Ugh.
I'm looking for that bracelet now.
Anyone up for a book study?
Reminds me of Hal Urban's dirty 30 words.
ReplyDeleteI would join a book study.
What a cute kitty! I used to foster a dog that snored SO loud. It was ridiculous. Louder than any human I've ever heard!
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I'm a new follower! Looking forward to reading more of your posts! =)
Meg
Third Grade in the First State
Complaining is one of the hardest habits to break. I call it a habit based on the observations of my two children. There was a time they didn't complain, though now they do. How? Why? My guess is from watching adults, such as myself.
ReplyDeleteI do a fairly good job not complaining at school, though it is very difficult among family and friends. I think I will add this book to my summer reading list. I have a lot of reflecting to do this summer.
Thank you for a great post Barbara!
I'm adding this to my booklist, too! BTW, I think if that's ALL you said then it qualifies as an observation. If you added more it's a complaint -- ha ha.
ReplyDeleteBarbara
Grade ONEderful
Ruby Slippers
It looks like you've discovered why the cat is named Motor. That looks like an excellent read and challenge too.
ReplyDelete❀ Tammy
Forever in First