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Broke Wife, Big City
I don't know how she doesn't do it
By Aprill Brandon 

Once upon a time (2010), in a land far, far away (exotic South Texas), there lived a woman (for lack of a better term) who was an expert at juggling many balls (not as dirty as it sounds). From dawn to dusk, the woman ran around (in a most elegant woman-like style), like a giant chicken with its head cut off (albeit in stylish and really, really painful heels). 

And then, suddenly one day, the woman...wait!...let's go with princess...suddenly one day, the princess...who was wicked pretty and owned two...THREE ponies!...found herself moving to a much less humid land far, far away called Boston. It was there where her balls (oh, don't be so juvenile) significantly dropped in number. 

But then an odd phenomenon happened. The less balls she had to deal with (OK, yeah, that does sound pretty dirty), the less she seemed able to get done. 

OK, OK, the jig is up. Obviously the woman...er...wicked pretty princess (who also had the lips of Angelina Jolie and the body of ScarJo) is me. 

During that year, I pumped out anywhere from 10 to 15 articles a week as an entertainment reporter (while still wasting a good 40 percent of my week on Facebook and Twitter), worked a second job, sat on the board of directors for the local CASA organization, planned my wedding, actually exercised on a semi-regular basis, did my 365 Project, showered daily (before noon!), maintained a thriving social life and ate socially acceptable breakfast food for breakfast instead of leftover lasgana and potato chips. 

Cut to 2012.  Now working as a freelancer, I have turned into pretty much the opposite of that old adage "If you want something done, give it to a busy person." Because now, if you need something done, don't give it to me unless you need it done sometime in 2015. I can't seem to manage more than one thing a day these days (and that one thing may or may not include showering). Not to mention, today for breakfast I ate a leftover cheeseburger and Fig Newton's for breakfast. 

For instance, it can literally take me the better half of a day just to read the Sunday editions of the New York Times and the Boston Globe now (and that's usually on Monday). And just yesterday, the only things I had to do on my "to-do" list were to pay three bills online and return two e-mails. Natually, this constituted dread and procrastination on my part until 3 p.m. when I finally drudged up the resolve to sit my behind down for a whopping 15 minutes to do it. 

It's like my new non-9-to-5 life has fallen under the rules of some mysterious universal law; much like Murphy's Law (only named after someone less gooberish-sounding, like Ricardo) where the less you have to do, the less time you have to do it. I can't tell you how many times my husband has come home from work and asked me "so, what did you do today?" And even though I felt I had a productive day, suddenly I realize I didn't when I have to respond with "well, I cleaned the kitchen and then wrote half a blog and then...um...put on makeup...and...well...I...retweeted a bunch a stuff..."  

Not, mind you, that I'm complaining. I love having more free time. I just have no idea where that extra free time is going. My theory is that little gnomes are sneaking into the space-time continuum and stealing minutes from my day when I'm not looking. 

Because me being lazy and not able to handle an unstructured life sounds just pathetic when you're 30. 

But luckily, I have a plan. Just like I did when I was a productive member of society, I'm going to schedule my day down to the minute and stick to it, no matter what. Which I will do as soon as I find the time. 

Stupid gnomes. 

Can’t get enough of Aprill? Can’t wait until next week?

Check out her website at http://aprillbrandon.com/


 
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