I’m sitting here listening
to Arcade Fire on my computer. It’s Friday early evening, bright and cold and windy,
a very unusual May 24. Tomorrow is full moon, a seriously important day for
buddhists, for it’s the day Buddha’s birthday is celebrated all over the Buddhist
world.
I’ve been thinking about
context and how it affects our perceptions and reactions. I’ve also been
marvelling at how it seems possible for me (and I presume this happens to
others) to make a problem, or find a problem, however well things are going.
Let’s start with that.
I am just finished with some tight and
pressing deadlines and am now in the clear, able to get started on dreaming
about and working at my next book project and other ambitions too, from the
garden to sketching to seeing neglected friends.
You’d think it would make
me feel light and free and very happy. And yes, I felt that way right as soon
as the time pressures were over. But then I fell into worrying about what I
should do each day. I no longer have the coercion of tight deadlines to keep me
moving steadily and methodically from one task to the next. That was survival
mode and it worked well.
Now I find myself trying to
optimise, because I have the luxury of choice. But it means that I hesitate and
get fussed about what I should do first, or whether I should go for a run or do
a household errand now and work later or vice versa, and on and on. It’s not
very interesting at all. And I’m sorry if this description is tedious. It just
seems important to raise this. Is it human nature at work here?
I assume the answer is that
I need to impose a structure on myself that resembles the coercive
deadline-situation structure. My efforts at optimising are just a way of
insisting on exercising moment-to-moment choice. If I could settle into the
harness of a structure, it would simplify a lot. And then I wouldn’t be fussing
and anxious about my moment to moment decisions.
On the other hand, the
unplanned moments of the day, the unfilled spaces, are the fruitful ones,
often. They mean there’s room/time to talk to a friend who has a problem, or to
daydream my way into a new story idea or a fresh way of seeing a familiar
problem. That’s part of my rationale for improvising my schedule through the
day.
Another more disciplined
way of working would be to cram or jam the work obligations etc into one
pre-determined part of the day, a defined chunk of time, thus leaving the ret
clear for these other more fluid and open-ended possibilities. I confess that I
have never managed, for more than a couple of days at a stretch, to impose
“artificial” constraints in that way. I am task driven, rather than structure-
or discipline- or rule-driven.
That being the case I need
to just chill a little on this pressure to optimise, to forgive myself when the
day feels unproductive, and to not have the heightened amped up expectation
that every day will be a knock-out.
Is this what growing up is
supposed to teach us?
I guess I am stuck in an
“optimistic child” mode, where each day or week or month feels full of rich
possibility, with elastic time into which can be crammed all sorts of delights.
And that’s fine, as long as I don’t get tied up in knots trying to optimise all
the time. Rather than focussing on what I don’t get done, I need to move from
task to task, without second-guessing myself.
I aked a friend in the
market about how he works his way through his days. He’s got some have-to-dos
at the start of the day, but then he moves into a mode where he just does
whatever chore or task presents itself next, a kind of fluid flow. He doesn’t
worry about the decisions, the order in which he does things. And my issue of
trying to optimise was a foreign idea to him.
He’s a model to emulate,
for sure, in his easy matter-of-fact “enjoy the day as it unfolds” attitude.
And he sure is productive, whle making it look effortless.
The other idea I wanted to
think about in this post is how context affects perception. It’s a truism,
sure, but worth remembering. I started reflecting about it a couple of days ago
when the weather suddenly turned extremely cold. In a coat and sweater and
scarf and socks and shoes, warm pants too, I still felt assaulted by the cold
and wind as I walked outside. I realised that this reaction was just like the
one described by winter-hating friends who have never become used to the cold.
And yet, if it had been January and the weather had been just the same, I’d
have found it balmy, pleasant, a wonderful treat.
This is not about my
emotional or intellectual reaction to the cold (though I have to admit that
wearing layers of wool on May 24 feels all wrong!). It’s that my body was in
another mode, summer mode, and as a result every chilly gust of wind inflicted
a kind of pain. In winter we tighten up and brace against the cold, so as not
to feel its assault. Without that kind of self-sheilding, we’re vulnerable to
it.
And so context is
everything. It’s not just about whether the temperature feels cold for this
time of year as opposed to January. It’s also about expectations, both
emotional and physical. So much of our reactions, physical, emotional, social,
is determined by our expectations. Of course this leads me to wander into that
whole other realm to do with expectations, which is how we manage ourselves
when we have disappointed expectations, because a person or a situation fails
to come up our expectations of it.
But that’s for another day…
One thing the hit of cold
has done is remind us all what a blessing warmth and sunshine are. And here in
Toronto, as I finish this post on Saturday afternoon, the sunshine is
beckoning, enticing me outside to beathe in its generosity.
1 comment:
Hi, I am a big fan of your work. I am from Manila. I am in my 40s and to say that weather is the pits, its because I remember gentler summers when I was growing up. Now it's intense and unforgiving. I commend people who can stay outdoors in immense heat and humidity. To say that what I can do within the day is highly influenced by how hot it is outside.
We are starting to get rains now, so it offers a short respite. But for most of the day, its pretty humid.
If the worst is over for Manila heat, I don't want to think what next year is gonna be like, 38 degrees?
Hope your summer in Toronto is kinder.
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