• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • About
    • About Jessika Hepburn
      • Press/Publications
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Branding
    • Ethics
    • Health
    • Legal
    • Marketing
    • Planning
  • Fellow Makers
    • Community
    • Interviews
    • Resources
  • For the Hands
    • DIY
    • Handmade Goodness
  • For the Head
  • For the Heart
    • 365 Days of Presence
Oh My! Handmade

Oh My! Handmade

Making a good life since 2010

Today I give myself permission to…

Monday, August 22, 2011 by Jessika Hepburn

permission

 

I’m going to be honest – this has been a tough month for me, full of heavy thoughts, unlike my usual terminally cheerful self. Maybe it is our handmade heritage month making me nostalgic or the leaves already starting to change colour on the trees. The summer is almost over and fall always makes me think of endings. Jennifer Perillo‘s loss of her husband also made me think of how quickly things can change-an instant transforming everything. I’ve got riots in London and children in Somalia roaming around in my heart, and an anniversary of one of my own major losses on my mind.

There has also been this constant feeling of failing at something. If I am amazing at my business I am not present as a parent, if I focus on parenting I fall behind on my business. Some months that juggling act is harder then others. I had a big wake up call this month too. On the first week of August I woke up early, after having spent a full day at the beach with the girls the day before, to the phone ringing. I thought it was a friend calling about a play date but when I went to go check on my oldest daughter Ila she wasn’t in her room. I listened to the message on the phone and my heart leaped into my throat.

My incredibly trusting six year old had packed a little bag and snuck out of the house while we were sleeping, walked out the front door, up the road and crossed our street to visit a friend to arrange her own playdate. It was a shock in more ways then one – I had not been being present as a parent, but worse, I was making Ila felt unwanted.

A heavy heavy load of guilt came and dumped itself on me.

I had to make some hard choices, keep building the momentum I have been creating for Oh My! or give myself permission to take the rest of the summer to focus on the girls, to wring every last bit of fun out of the sunny days left to us? A hard choice but a simple decision. My kids need me, bottom line. But as the emails and to-dos built up, the balls dropped, the projects postponed, I was feeling an equally heavy load of guilt. After talking with a friend about it she mentioned giving herself permission to feel a certain way. That word really stuck with me, it was exactly what I needed, to give myself permission to stop feeling guilty. I give myself permission to slack off until September and then to take Sundays off from now on. I give myself permission to be okay with where I am right now. So I wrote my own permission slip and thought you might want one too, click the banners below to download your own.

Let’s give ourselves permission to take the time, space, help, whatever it is that we feel in need of without guilt or shame. We are only human and deserve to be kind to ourselves.

What are you going to give yourself permission to do today?

 

Filed Under: Editor, Entrepreneurship, For the Head, For the Heart, Health, Interviews, Resources

Primary Sidebar

Articles

Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’

Mine-Mill organizers claimed that the first of four concerts, held at the Peace Arch in Blaine, WA, in 1952, attracted 40,000 admirers, mostly from the Canadian side of the border near Vancouver. Source: Pacific Tribune Archive.

On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance

New Year's Revolution, illustration of hands breaking free from shackles

A New Year’s Revolution

Go Do Some Great Thing, Lawrence Hill

Go Do Some Great Thing

Dr. Pauli Murray, "I intend to destroy segregation by positive and embracing methods. When my brothers try to draw a circle to exclude me, I shall draw a larger circle to include them." An American Credo

Draw a Larger Circle

Fellow Makers, young Italian immigrant garment worker in Brooklyn

#FellowMakers History & the Triangle Factory Fire

Seventy Ways to Build Community, Save Your Sanity, and Change the World

70 Ways to Build Community

Stop the Hustle | Oh My! Handmade

Stop the Hustle: On Slowing Down, Stepping Up & Paying Attention

Community Is Not Clubs: How We’re Segregating the Internet & What We Can Do

Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike

Categories

Read More

  • On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance
  • Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’
  • Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike
  • The #EtsyStrike begins today July 16, 2018. Learn Why!
  • Des préoccupations liées aux changements aux valeurs Etsy mènent à l’appel à une grève Etsy (#GreveEtsy)
  • Press Release: Concern over Changes to Etsy Values Leads to #EtsyStrike
  • Community Statements on Changes to Values at Etsy #etsystrike
  • CALL FOR COMMUNITY STATEMENTS: Do changes to values at Etsy matter to you?
  • Et Tu, Etsy? A call for fellow makers to strike.
  • A Thousand and One Reasons to Hope

Footer

Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’

In June of 2016 I supported my love Chris as we dealt with the death of both his parents and a co-worker over a three week period. This essay written the summer of those deaths is my attempt to make sense of grief and the struggle to carry all that I care for. Originally published […]

Archives

  • On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance
  • Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’
  • Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike
  • The #EtsyStrike begins today July 16, 2018. Learn Why!
  • Des préoccupations liées aux changements aux valeurs Etsy mènent à l’appel à une grève Etsy (#GreveEtsy)

Search

Copyright © 2025 · Log in