Inspiring Your Best

Share this post

1000 jumbled puzzle pieces—

kathrynleroy.substack.com

1000 jumbled puzzle pieces—

a metaphor for hope and life

Kathryn A. LeRoy
Mar 18
1
4
Share this post

1000 jumbled puzzle pieces—

kathrynleroy.substack.com
A jumbled pile of jigsaw puzzle pieces against a black background
The Puzzle © Kathryn LeRoy

Hello friends,

I spent the week with my cousins. Four sisters, our mothers, instilled in us a strong work ethic surpassed only by unparalleled determination.

We had one mission this week—a thousand-piece jigsaw puzzle.

The pieces tumbled from the box in a clump of reds, greens, purples, and yellows. Where do we begin? Six heads huddled over the pile as twelve hands shuffled and sorted.

We matched colors, eyed the slight differences in the outies and innies, and lost track of time. The quest became all-encompassing. As we worked in tandem, edges took shape and soon snippets of the image materialized.

The jumble of colors and shapes made little sense at the beginning. Searching for each piece, frustrations soared at the potential loss only to find the missing piece under our feet. Relief.

Finally, in one collective sigh, we saw the end. Nothing compares to the thrill of placing that final piece. What seemed overwhelming was now complete and perfect.

Picture of a completed puzzle. Colorful lego pieces sorted by color in compartments to look like ice cream, an  ice cream scoop sits in the lower left-hand corner
It always seems impossible until it’s done. —Nelson Mandela © Kathryn LeRoy

Life is like that puzzle.

Every day is sort of a jigsaw puzzle. You have to make sure that you're putting the most important things first. —Julia Hartz

As we sorted through the colors and shapes, we looked for the borders, four corners, and sides. Those straight lines grounded us. In life, our values serve as the boundaries for how we live each day.

There are no extra pieces in the universe. Everyone is here because he or she has a place to fill, and every piece must fit itself into the big jigsaw puzzle. —Deepak Chopra

Every puzzle box contains all the pieces to stitch together an image. We may not always see or understand our purpose, but we are all interconnected with gifts only we can contribute to the universe.

The problem is that we always look for the missing piece of the puzzle instead of finding a place for the one in our hand. —Aina Radoi

How often do we search for meaning in all the wrong places? Our greatest longing may be right before us, but we ignore this precious moment. We miss the contentment, joy, and purpose hidden in our clenched hands.

Children astound me with their inquisitive minds. The world is wide and mysterious to them, and as they piece together the puzzle of life, they ask 'Why?' ceaselessly. —John C. Maxwell

My favorite two questions are “Why?” and “What if?” What a pity that we lose the playfulness and wonder of children. Curiosity keeps the mind active, creative, and open to new perspectives.

I wanna make a jigsaw puzzle that's 40,000 pieces. And when you finish it, it says “go outside.” —Demetri Martin

“Go outside and play!”

That may be the best advice we ever received as children. Just think of all the magic you found staring at the clouds, splashing in puddles, following ant trails, or sitting on the lake’s edge watching fish circles. We need more of that.

Sunset on the lake with the shore and sky refelected in the water and a fisherman in the center of the foreground facing the lake
Sunset Fishing © Kathryn LeRoy

In life and puzzles, Never Give Up—You Don’t Know What Surprise Awaits.

Puzzles are more than a pastime and have a long history of bettering our lives.

A few puzzle melodies as you tackle your next jigsaw: “Puzzle Pieces,  Jigsaw Puzzle of Life, and Puzzle Peace.”

“We are all beautiful and magical puzzles made up of so many tiny pieces and parts. Without just one of them, something would be missing and we would not be whole … Every single piece fits perfectly.”
― Camille Lucy

Find a little wonder this week, tackle a jigsaw puzzle, any puzzle, or play outside dancing in the wildflowers!

A single yellow flower with a brown center and golden stamens
Wildflower © Kathryn LeRoy

With gratitude,

Kathryn


I always welcome your thoughts, so, please leave me a message or click the little heart at the bottom of the page.

Leave a comment

Thanks for reading. Feel free to forward this weekly note to someone who would enjoy a few words of inspiration.

Or if you received this from a friend and want to receive my weekly post,

Sign up here

4
Share this post

1000 jumbled puzzle pieces—

kathrynleroy.substack.com
Previous
Next
4 Comments
Evelyn Krieger
Mar 18Liked by Kathryn A. LeRoy

I just love the simplicity and wisdom in this. I'll never look at a jigsaw puzzle with the same eyes.

Expand full comment
Reply
1 reply by Kathryn A. LeRoy
Lisa N Bolin
Writes Northern Notes
Mar 19Liked by Kathryn A. LeRoy

Gorgeous, Kathryn! I sat with a 5 year old this week at work, who doesn’t have the greatest concentration span, doing a puzzle. They chose it themselves and I asked if they knew the best way to do a puzzle - the corners and edges. Grouping colours. They have multiple languages at home and struggles with language at times. What an amazing time it was, nudging them along when “it’s too hard” escaped their lips. The satisfaction on that little face at the end when the final piece was put in was just wonderful!

Thank you for your lovely words and quotes. One piece at a time... 💖

Expand full comment
Reply
1 reply by Kathryn A. LeRoy
2 more comments…
TopNewCommunity

No posts

Ready for more?

© 2023 Kathryn A. LeRoy
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start WritingGet the app
Substack is the home for great writing