So the work I needed to do when my turn came to take a deeper look into where I stand in my life right now was to "get into the flow." And what I came to, in response to thoughtful, probing questions from those around me, was the understanding that I could choose to see those details as a part of the flow, not as extraneous and annoying distractions. Some asked this question: When do you see yourself as a writer? The answer was an easy one: there's never a moment when I don't see myself as a writer. The follow-up: do you see yourself as a writer when you're taking out the garbage? When you're doing the dishes? Of course...
I guess I had known this before, but the questions brought it into renewed focus: I'm not just "writing" when I sit down to write. Clearing the desk to prepare for it is also a part of it. And making the appointments for interviews, if they need to be made. Even answering the ton of email. How much easier it gets to be when I manage to get past the separation that my mind wants to make, between "working" and all those distractions that keep me from it! When I see it all as a part of the flow. The distinction itself sets me up for an unnecessary, time-consuming and discouraging battle.
A useful insight, then... I'm grateful to those who helped me come to it.
4 comments:
"---there's never a moment when I don't see myself as a writer." That's the foundation of how we have come to know you---through the most excellent manifestations of view and art, experience and wisdom. The "tied up" parts are only tiny knots in the golden thread. Peace m
Not sure what to make
of your last comment on
my blog.
Pete.
Thanks, M, for the kind words!
Pete, as I recall, I was trying to express some of my own difficulties with the Christian faith. I honor your embrace of it, but have no call to do the same. I find relief in Buddhism, which seems to me to offer a good, strong spiritual ground without requiring my belief in something/SomeOne "out of this world." I like, too, that the Buddha offers refuge, not salvation. Just my take...
The battle between the distractions and the desire to work is something that hinders me greatly, sometimes it seems like a real fight to get anything written. I hadn't realised that seeing the distractions as adversarial was simply giving them more power.
I think that as in meditation, we can use the distractions to remind us we should be doing something more important, take their momentum and use it against them. Writers Judo? ;-D
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