Balancing 
                Work and Leisure
              We 
                are created for both work and leisure. Work stimulates our mind, 
                engages our body, energizes our creativity, and helps us make 
                an impact on the world in which we live. Work is a gift for the 
                soul. Without work our soul is listless and stumbles about the 
                cobblestones of life, uncertain and empty. 
                
                But leisure is as important to our human existence as work. Work 
                without leisure steals our joy and strips us of our desire to 
                create. Leisure is the necessary counterpart to work. It wakes 
                us up again to the movement of life. New images poke cheerily 
                into our soul and in those new creations we are re-created. 
                
                There’s no need to postpone enjoying the gift of leisure 
                until you can travel to white sandy beaches studded with coconut 
                palms. Expose yourself every day to the movement of creation, 
                and you’ll find that the tasks that had lost their joy and 
                felt like drudgery, surprisingly, have been infused with new hope 
                and possibility. You might finally admit that plopping down in 
                front of the TV after work no longer leaves you feeling relaxed. 
                Instead, you might decide to give as much attention to your leisure 
                as to your work, and thereby allow your soul to be captivated 
                and re-charged. You might just find that at work you create meaning, 
                and when you are at leisure, meaning is created in you.
                
                Tip to try: For the next week, give yourself one hour 
                of leisure every day and experience your leisure differently each 
                day. Try things like taking a walk, sitting in a park, feeding 
                the ducks, reading a book, hiking a mountain, writing a poem, 
                having coffee with a friend, taking 27 photographs with a disposable 
                camera, learning a new language, reading a travel magazine and 
                planning a trip, or, or, or…