Use It Now

Stop Saving the Good Stuff for Someday

Stop Saving the Good Stuff for Someday
The other day I opened the cabinet to grab a bowl for dinner and noticed something I’ve apparently been ignoring for years. Right over there in my china cupboard are the "special" ones — the pretty bowls and plates that are part of a set of dishes my grandparents gave me. And without even thinking about it, I always grab one of the plain, practical bowls to use every day.


 Fancy tea set

That’s when the question hit me: when exactly am I planning to start using the good ones? I’ve had them for a long time. Somewhere along the way, I must have decided they belonged to a different version of my life. I mean, I pull a few out every now and then for a pretty little tea party with my granddaughter, but I never really use them. 

The more I thought about it, the more I realized this isn’t just about dishes. At this point, I’m basically preserving things for a future version of me who is more organized, more prepared, and somehow a little more put together. Future-AJ has people over more often. She plans nicer meals. She serves things in the pretty bowls instead of the pans they were cooked in in. She sets the table instead of sitting on the sofa to eat and stays just a little more ahead of everything.


 Pretty table setting

Meanwhile, current-AJ is reheating leftovers, grabbing whatever’s clean, and using the plain, "practical" pieces while the nicer ones sit in the cabinet waiting for “later.” And it’s not just kitchen things. There’s the notebook I don’t want to mess up with my sometimes mindless rantings and the outfit hanging there waiting for just the right occasion. Little by little, I’ve been assigning the good things to a future life that doesn’t quite match the one I’m actually living.

The truth is, the future version of me I’ve been saving things for mostly exists in my imagination. Real life doesn’t suddenly become more polished or more impressive. It stays a little busy, a little messy, and a little imperfect — and so do I. Future-AJ isn’t going to be a completely different person. She’s just going to be me, a little older and still figuring things out on an ordinary Tuesday.


 Pretty tea cup

That realization led to a slightly uncomfortable question: why am I keeping them? Why am I holding onto the stand-ins while the nicer things sit unused, waiting for a life that isn’t actually happening yet? Or why am I holding on to the nicer things when I'm obviously not using them? At some point, it stopped being about saving the good stuff and started being about living with the leftovers.

So I'm going to make a small shift. I'll put the special dishes into everyday rotation. I'll use the nicer serving bowl on a regular weeknight. I'll start writing in the good notebook. I'll even let a few of the worn-out things go.

Nothing dramatic is changing. Dinner will still be simple. The day will still be ordinary. But something about it will feel different. As if I stopped treating my life as if it were the warm-up for something better and started recognizing that these regular, everyday moments are the life.


 High tea

I think sometimes we save the good things because we’re waiting for life to feel more settled, more impressive, or more worthy. But life doesn’t send a signal when it finally becomes special enough. It just keeps moving, one ordinary day at a time. And if we keep saving the good stuff for someday, we risk spending those days surrounded by things we don’t even really like anymore. And what if it works in reverse? What if actually using the nice, special things is all it takes to make the day special?

Because the life I’ve been saving things for isn’t coming later. This is it. Not perfect, not company-ready most days, and not especially fancy — just real life. And lately, I’m starting to think real life is exactly where the good things belong.

Future-AJ will just have to deal with it.






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Have a question or something to share?

✨ My blog exists because I know what it feels like to keep everything jumbled in your head — like a messy pile of clothes you can’t sort through.
 Writing it all down brings clarity, calm, and sometimes even healing answers I didn’t know I was looking for.

Honestly, that’s why I keep showing up to write — it helps me make sense of things. 

 Even if you have no intentions of ever publishing your work, I highly recommend writing stuff down. It doesn't have to be a literary masterpiece or even full, grammatically correct sentences... just dump those random thoughts onto paper... you'll see what I mean.

*This blog centers the GenX experience, simply because that’s the lens I live through—but anyone looking for connection, natural wellness, grief support, or a little real-talk in this messy stage of life is more than welcome.

✨ My blog exists because I know what it feels like to keep everything jumbled in your head — like a messy pile of clothes you can’t sort through.

 Writing it all down brings clarity, calm, and sometimes even healing answers I didn’t know I was looking for.


Honestly, that’s why I keep showing up to write — it helps me make sense of things. 

 Even if you have no intentions of ever publishing your work, I highly recommend writing stuff down. It doesn't have to be a literary masterpiece or even full, grammatically correct sentences... just dump those random thoughts onto paper... you'll see what I mean.

Hi! I'm AJ Flanagan.

 
Hey there — I’m AJ.

I’m an empty-nester and a widow who had a wake-up call about the hidden toxins in everyday products most of us grew up using. Our parents didn’t know. We didn’t know either. But once you start paying attention, it’s hard to ignore.

Life shifted in 2018 when my husband, Eric, was diagnosed with leukemia — and again in 2023 when we faced a second cancer diagnosis. Supporting him through treatment changed how we looked at just about everything, including how we cared for our home, our bodies, and our day-to-day routines.
We didn’t aim for perfection or extremes. We focused on simple, meaningful changes — reducing toxic load in our home, choosing better ingredients, prioritizing nourishing food, and building calmer rhythms into daily life. Tools like aromatherapy, music, meditation, and intentional rest became part of how we coped and stayed grounded.

Caring for Eric deepened my commitment to living well — not as a trend, but as a way of showing up with intention and grace, even in the hard seasons.

Now I share our story, the lessons we learned, the small changes that made a big difference, and how I'm moving forward. My hope is to make wellness feel more approachable, less overwhelming, and rooted in real life — especially for anyone who wants healthier options without pressure or perfection.

If you’re here to find what actually works for you, you’re in the right place.

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