Work, Frustration, and Finding a Way Back

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Work, Frustration, and Finding a Way Back

Summary

A demanding job, unmet expectations, and lingering frustration shaped the day—but through effort, reflection, and small moments of progress, things slowly found their way back to calm.

A day of hard work, frustration, and learning to reset
Published Mar 24, 2026 3 min read

This chapter is personal reflection, not professional advice. If a topic feels heavy, pause and take care of yourself. For urgent or crisis support, visit When You Need More Help.

A Break From Writing, Not From Life

Today is March 23, 2026. It's been almost two weeks since I've written one of these. That doesn't mean life slowed down—if anything, it picked up. Lately, Eve and I have been going on nature walks with the kids, exploring different trails, sometimes almost daily. It even led to something new. I created a YouTube channel called Trail Explorers.

Today, though, had nothing to do with trails.

A Job That Tested Patience

Instead, Eve and I took on a landscaping job in the neighborhood. From the start, it was one of those jobs—the kind where nothing is quite right no matter how much effort you put in. Every detail was questioned, every adjustment critiqued.

I even went above and beyond to fix an issue she was having, without charging extra, thinking it would help smooth things over. It didn't. If anything, it just gave her more to critique.

In the end, we made $47 for about 1.75 hours of work. not terrible, but not great either considering the effort and the added stress.

Some jobs pay money.
Some jobs cost patience.

When Frustration Spills Over

After the job, we went back to my house and had a short window—about 45 minutes, no kids, just us. I tried to take advantage of that time to reconnect, but she wasn't in the mood.

That part hit me harder than it should have.

It wasn't just the moment—it was the timing. Everything lined up perfectly, and still... nothing. I let that frustration sit instead of letting it go.

And it showed.

For the next couple of hours, I carried that energy with me. When we got back to her place, I started raking her backyard. What began as helping quickly turned into something else. I pushed hard—too hard—trying to burn off what I was feeling.

I raked half of a large backyard in about fifteen minutes, fast enough to leave blisters behind. After that, I slowed down, but I kept going, still carrying that same intensity, bagging up a good amount by the time I finished.

Resetting the Evening

Afterward, we shifted gears. With what we had available, we put together a new kind of chili for dinner. Nothing fancy, just working with what was there.

Later, we went back to my house. We fixed the trampoline, something that had been needing attention, then took a shower and settled in for the night.

We ended up watching a movie while I continued looking for more landscaping work—trying to line up the next opportunity, the next step forward.

What I'm Learning

Today was a mix of effort, frustration, and recovery.

Not every feeling needs to turn into action the way mine did. I know that. But I also recognize that I'm still learning how to handle disappointment without letting it take over the moment.

Even so, we worked.
We made money.
We fixed things.
We ended the night calm.

And right now, that counts.

About the Author

Written by Donald Faulknor

Donald Faulknor is the creator of Our Unfinished Story, a Life Library of faith, fatherhood, heartbreak, healing, becoming, and rebuilding. His writing is rooted in lived experience, personal reflection, and the ongoing work of finding meaning in unfinished seasons.

These chapters are personal reflections, not professional counseling, legal advice, medical advice, or crisis support. They are written to help readers feel less alone, find language for what they are carrying, and continue the story with care.

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