I was busy running a New Year's Day celebration on 1 January 2015, but
was itching to open my happiness jar. There were fifty three notes in the
container and an analysis shows that four categories of things make me happy -
Achievement - 15, Family Time - 15, Health - 10 and Writing - 13. This is fascinating.
In my Achievement category, eight notes relate to my personal
achievements, mainly to do with my swimming lessons (jumping in, swimming a length of proper breast stroke, spending time in the deep end of the pool) and writing, but one covers
learning to use loom bands and another my love of selling jewellery at the
school fete. The one, which will probably make you laugh, is my joy at learning
the roll on method of putting on a quilt cover - almost as exciting as learning
how to fold a fitted sheet!
Most of the other notes in the Achievement category relate to little son
- progress and prizes at school, settling into secondary school and cooking a Victoria
sandwich cake from a recipe without any help.
The final note in this group relates to the publication of Janice
Preston's debut novel, Mary and the Marquis. I was so proud of her.
Family Time covers lovely holidays and days out. New Year's Day and
Christmas Day celebrations. This group emphasises to me how lucky I am to have
a lovely family.
The Health category covers the health of family members and myself. My
joy that little son's knee cap wasn't broken after a fall at school (the
casualty nurse suspected it was before the x-ray). The sigh of relief when big
son's suspect mole was okay. The miracle that my hubbie didn’t suffer serious
injury after a fall down fourteen tube station steps in London. My minor
operation that wasn't as bad as I'd feared.
Considering that I nearly gave up writing in 2014, the Writing category
relates solely to me. It covers my joy at completing the NaNoWriMo writing
challenge to complete 50,000 words in November, the writing courses and events
I've attended and enjoyed - including the RNA conference, a Sue Moorcroft
course, an Alison May course. Having an uplifting Twitter conversation with the
lovely Iona Grey. Finishing my novel to send to the RNA New Writers' Scheme and
then a later note celebrating the positive comments on that manuscript. The amazing
appearance on the charity book stall in Sainsbury’s of a book on the very
subject covered by my work in progress - a clear sign I was not meant to give
up writing. The encouragement and fun provided by a small group of writers in
my local area who meet to beat the doubt crows.
I could go on, but don’t want to bore you. I have found the process of
keeping and analysing a happiness jar, very uplifting and, needless to say, I
have started one for 2015 already. I recommend the process to you.