HOW TO FIND TIME FOR STUDY
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When we read a book we are apt to picture the author comfortably situated in a cozy
arm-chair, away from all care and interruptions for hours at a time. It is supposed that the house is
well equipped with competent servants, and that nothing remains for the author to do but to sit and
write.
This is as it should be if the matron of the home is to help make the living by her pen; but if
some of us waited for such favorable circumstances we would never get much done. Though we
are not blest with plenty of spare time, still much may be accomplished if the few spare moments
are carefully saved. A large number of those who have done the most along literary lines have
been people with very little opportunity. Their ambition has overmastered their circumstances, and
their determination won.
If one desires to have time for instructive reading or literary work, he will have to forego
some things that many people think are essential to their happiness, such as fancy work, light
reading, chit-chat, parties, extra dressing, and a dozen other things. If it is agreeable to the man of
the house, the cooking may be done more simply, omitting cake and pie-making. Newspapers
coming every day take about all the spare time most men have. If a weekly paper be substituted, the
news will be more condensed and reliable, and will not cost so much time or money.
There are some things that will help one who is struggling to obtain time for study. The first
is the thought brought out by Bishop William Pierce, when he said, in substance, that God is the
author of knowledge, and the closer one lives to Him the wiser he will become.
The second is method. Write out a program for the day, and follow it if possible, planning
to read a little at certain hours. This can easily be done where there are no small children, and
even with these a written plan pinned upon the wall will help. For instance, such a list as the
following has helped the writer to accomplish more than she could have done otherwise:
Breakfast at 7 o'clock; family prayer at 7:30; dish-washing, sweeping, etc., 8:00; fifteen
minutes for Bible study at 9:30; dinner at 12:00.
Then I tried to be through with everything so that I could write or practice music by four
o'clock, and by having an early supper I could read or write after the children were asleep for the
night. Often the interruptions and cares have been such that I could not crowd any literary work
into the day, and the only way to get it in was to ask some member of the family to read aloud
while the others were finishing the meal or while I was working. It is a fine plan to let one read
aloud after supper, while the others are washing dishes or sitting around the fireside sewing. When
a baby is in the house one cannot always have quiet evenings, as some babies do not retire till late,
and when this is the case, a woman who does all her own work will have to admit that she has no
spare time.
Still there is hope. At such times I have been driven nigh unto despair for time to write and
study, and many a time have I placed a book on the kitchen table, open and propped up, so I could
catch a word now and then as I hastily passed by it to the sink or the stove. Many songs and Bible
chapters have been memorized in this way, and short quotations have been learned from various
books, and used when getting up articles or sermons.
When sewing, I often place a book or paper on a chair or table in front of me, so that a line
may be read now and then. While holding the baby, sometimes one can read if the book is placed
where the baby will not get it.
New tunes and poems will come into one's mind when doing such work as sweeping, as
then one is not apt to be interrupted, and the mind is free. While riding on streetcar or steam-cars is
a good time to compose.
Just now a little chubby form presents herself at my chair saying, "Up," and up she comes
into my arms. She is soon comforted and rested, and asks to crawl down again. I could not deny
her the privilege of being cuddled, for her little heart needs it, and books must come in later. I have
really come to enjoy writing with a baby in my arms.
When I was a girl an old-maid was once entertained in mother's home. She noticed my
strenuous methods for acquiring knowledge, and remarked that her way was to wait until all her
work was done, and then to sit down and read. I much preferred her way, but God had not blest me
with the time and opportunity she possessed.
While attending school, having to work for my board, time was so scarce, books were
placed open upon one end of the ironing board while I did the ironing for a family of six.
When I had a home of my own, I saw that if anything along literary lines was accomplished
it would be by planning and scheming, and the foregoing methods were adopted.
There were some who seemed to have no ambition above merely existing, and they loved
to talk. They were a great trial to me, and I thought if they knew how much I needed and
appreciated my few spare moments they surely would not stay so long. So I adopted the following
method: All hand-sewing was left and put in a basket, which was kept in a convenient place. When
the neighbors came in I begged the privilege of doing a little mending, or of working some
button-holes while we talked. In this way the time went swiftly, and I found that the work-basket
kept about empty, whereas before I was always behind. The best of it all was that it was done in
the time that hitherto had been wasted.
A notebook is a fine thing to carry with one. Choose one small enough to go into your
pocket or handbag. In this put passages from books which you wish to memorize, and in it write
stray thoughts and circumstances which may be of use later. There are many times, while out away
from the house, that this notebook may be taken out and read -- on the train, waiting for a friend or
a car, your turn at the counter, and even at lectures or other public gatherings before the program
commences. Many a time have I seen my sainted mother open her Bible at a place like that to
improve her time, while others were chatting or gazing at the incomers.
Thoughts that are valuable sometimes come to one at very unexpected times. When busy all
day, I have often been waked up at night by Divine inspiration to write a poem or article, which
always leaves before morning, and is lost forever, unless I have obeyed my promptings and written
it down at the time it was given.
Often a new thought comes while washing dishes or clothes, and new tunes come when
rocking baby to sleep. For this reason I find it best to keep a pencil in my hair, lest a stray thought
be lost. If I wait until there is time to stop work and write it down at the desk it usually never gets
done. Any old thing will do to write it on -- a board, a paper sack, a pasteboard carton, a shoe
box, or the under-side of a chair bottom.
At one time I was rushed, and could find nothing upon which to write my new subject, so
with a pencil put it onto the under-side of a dinner plate. When a pencil has been unavailable, I
have used a burnt match or a stick dipped in ink or paint. One time when moving, pencil and paper
were packed away. A fine subject for an article presented itself. I had a fountain pen, however and
quickly taking off my shoe, the subject was written upon its lining. My husband playfully said that
after this people would want to be reading the lining of my shoes.
I have never accomplished much. Perhaps I would have done more if I had had a better
chance, but what little has been done I owe first to God; second to my mother, who taught me to
gather up the fragments (of time), that nothing be lost; and third, to my husband, who has
encouraged me along the line of my calling.
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