So what’s with all the talk about saving time anyway? What’s the point of trying to get things done in 30 minutes?

When I think about the point of doing things more quickly, I think of the last lines of one of my favorite books, Cheaper by the Dozen (Just for the record, though I love the movie with Steve Martin, nothing beats the original book, published decades ago).

The father of the clan of a dozen children, Frank Gilbreth was an efficiency expert. and when people would ask him what he was so intent on shaving a minute here and a minute there for, he’d answer, “For work, if you love that best…For education, for beauty, for art, for pleasure…For mumblety-peg, if that’s where your heart lies.”

I’ve read that book at least ten times over the past three decades, and that line brings tears to my eyes every single time (and I am NOT a crier!). He got it — he knew that the why was an individual choice, and whether someone was using their “extra time” to weed their garden or rock babies in the NICU or do crossword puzzles or solve world hunger, it didn’t matter. What mattered is that you were making time for the things that you loved. THAT is what makes this world a better place.

So if you’re wondering about what your motivation for speeding things up is, look to where your heart lies. i want you to spend less time on chores and get more done so you can enjoy your family more and have the opportunity to do what fulfills you, whatever that might be. Even if that’s mumblety-peg.

P.S. If you’re wondering what my mumblety-peg is, part of my “saved” time is spent scrapbooking. It’s a hobby (obsession?) I love because of the way I can combine story-telling, creativity, and two of my favorite things, paper and pens! If you’d like to see more of my scrapbooking, you’re welcome at Layout A Day. You won’t be surprised to know that one of my specialties is 30-minute scrapbook pages!

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  • http://dani-adayinthelifeofacoffeeaddict.blogspot.com/ Danielle

    Oh my gosh I absolutely love love love the book Cheaper by the Dozen (and due for another reading I think) and I love the original film from 1950! It is a great lesson not to let laundry and scrubbing tubs to get in the way of living life!

  • http://www.scrapsofmind.com Karen (karooch from Scraps of Mind)

    And what a noble and magnificent mumblety-peg scrapbooking is. I also do card making and digital scrapbooking. As well as hybrid scrapbooking, which combines the best of all worlds. Like you, I am not obsessed with it. I can give it up any time I want . . . honest!

  • Daphne

    I was just looking at your ideas today for the first time! You have some FABULOUS stuff here! I will be sharing it with lots of my friends!!
    I did have to interject though, because I used to play mumbley-peg as a child! LOL!

    Mumblety-peg (also known as mumbley-peg, mumblepeg, mumble-the-peg, mumbledepeg or mumble-de-peg) is an old outdoor game played by children using pocketknives.[1] The term “Mumblety-peg” came from the practice of putting a peg of about 2 or 3 inches into the ground. The loser of the game had to take it out with his teeth. [2] Mumbletypeg was very popular as a schoolyard game in the nineteenth and first half of the twentieth centuries, but with increased concern over child safety the game has declined in popularity

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