Photo by Bruno Nascimento on Unsplash |
"Can you go today?" my friend texted as she tried to get me to the gym. She'd been working this angle for nearly two months and my calendar seemed to make it impossible.
"I can't today," I replied, "but keep asking. I do want to get there." She was likely doubting my sincerity as I had replied so many times that I couldn't make it work. I may have been doubting it too.
In all honesty, this went on for a few months. Finally she sent me a text inquiring, "Can you go to the gym Monday, Thursday, or Saturday?" Clever. Three days did make it possible to make it work. As I looked at my calendar there was an opening so we scheduled a time to go.
Sometimes a small step is better than doing nothing at all.
That was two months ago. Yesterday, I was driving back from a run - okay a walk, jog, run, walk - at the gym and thinking about how I seemed to have found a rhythm with the gym. I am starting to want to get to the gym. It's nothing amazing, but I've gone 2-3 times each week for about two months now. I just gave myself permission to quit trying to put in place long workouts and just get to the gym. I gave myself permission to just take a first step. I committed to going at least once a week. Then once a week became twice a week. Since I gave up trying to do long workouts and just get to the gym, I often find myself there three times a week if my calendar allows. It is a small step, but big.
It's like that in our classrooms too. Sometimes the challenges can seem so overwhelming that it's hard to dive in to tackle them. I can remember times when my teaching in reading or writing workshop seemed to not be working. It was in those times that if I could just take one small step, I would begin to see a difference. Sometimes it was committing to keeping my mini lesson mini or making sure I didn't skip a share. Sometimes it was pushing myself to stay on time so that a support teacher was able to push in and use her time effectively. Sometimes it was putting more time into my language when I was unsure of next steps or spending time to find the right question to start an inquiry. One little change can often make a big difference.
Sometimes a small step is better than doing nothing at all.
Whether in our personal or professional lives, there are times we want to make a change, but it seems so big. Sometimes we are presented with a problem that feels overwhelming. Sometimes we find ourselves in cycles of habit we'd like to break. Sometimes we want to improve something, but the task seems to large to begin. Maybe, in those times, the secret is to find one small step that will make a difference. Before we know it we are on our way.
Sometimes a small step is all it takes.
What's the small step you want to take?
Sometimes a small step...
is big.