Friday, October 25, 2013
Reinvention
Which got me to thinking. Reinvention. Reinventing selves. Celebrities do it: Madonna, Elton John. Robert Downey Jr. But do regular people as well?
And what is reinvention? This is the part where I really began to ponder the implications of such a thing. Is it simply taking everything in your life that is undesirable and doing the exact opposite? Is completely changing your persona? Is it a combination of both or is it even more drastic: a complete reinvention of who you are as a person?
Admittedly most of us probably reinvent ourselves over the course of our lives as we slowly move in to new interests and relationships and move out of old ones as well. But this seems to be something of a natural change in life, much as a tree may send out branches to chase the light without changing the underlying shape of the tree. Reinvention - as discussed and practiced in this context - is much more drastic than that: a total remaking of the public personality into something that someone is not or is at least perceived not to be.
There is certainly no consideration here in reinvention to stay in the public eye (since I am not in it anyway) - but there is some consideration in being able to move forward in my own life - as Socrates noted, the biggest problem with traveling is that we always take ourselves with us everywhere we go. And if ourself is what is holding us back from moving on, perhaps it is time to change that - but in a very conscious and planned way. A reinvention, if you will.
What would such a reinvention look like? I am not fully aware of all the details as I consider it. Surely changing those things that we dislike about ourselves is part of it. But it has to be more than a simple change from one to another. It has to be a grasping of an entirely new thing, as when one drops the sword when two swords are locked together to grapple with the hands to gain the victory. Yottsu te o hanasu, dropping four hands, Musashi said.
I am not fully sure what it looks like - but I fully know it needs to be done. In some ways I have come as far as I can as who I am. To do more, to go farther, I may need to reinvent who am I am, to become (in some ways) someone else.
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Making Quicker Decisions
I know that it is real. I know because I have done it before. There is just suddenly a sense about you, a determination that this time it is an actual decision and that from this moment onward you are simply going to go about the business of moving in this new direction.
My real interest is probably how does one get to that point more quickly.
As I have discussed before, I am someone to whom the art of making decisions - real decisions, decisions that are acted upon - is difficult. I procrastinate. I temporize. I find reasons to accept the status quo and continue on with it, even as I may become more and more unhappy with the situation at hand. It is only after I seem to reach a point - which arguably I should have reached some time earlier -that I finally make a choice.
And this is the issue: the amount of time it takes to make that choice, to reach that point of commitment, to agree internally that it is time to move forward. Imagine what would be possible if I simply chose to compress this cycle, to make the commitment to move on after, say, three times instead of fifty?
I was reminded of this last night at Nighean Dhonn's soccer practice where her coaches kept encouraging them to "make quick decisions, make quick decisions". Slow decisions made in the course of sports telegraphs one's moves to the other team and gives them time to adjust. It would seem to be no different in my life as well: the amount of time it takes me to commit to making that next step, moving on from the bad situation, gives life or the people involved the ability to "fix" the problem - which never really seems to fix the problem as too often it addresses only the symptoms, not the root cause.
It is not that the evidence may be there - it often is. It is not that need for the change is there - it often is. It is a matter of simply finding the confidence and ability to say "Yes, this really is not right. It is time to do something different. It is time to change this situation."
Because the more quickly we move from the undesired situations the more quickly we are able to move to the better ones.
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Work Hard, Get Experience, Leave
It is probably no secret to those who know me that I am unhappy with my current position. It is arguable whether or not I am unhappy with my line of work as well: there are days when I can actually look and say that I am making a contribution to the greater good. However, there are reasons which lead to believe that in terms of personal and professional growth, I have reached my limit.
The problem, of course, is finding another position.
Part of that problem, of course, is experience. With so many people in the market with experience it is becoming harder and harder to gain employment. As a result of it being an employer's market, the list of skills and experience one needs to have is becoming greater and greater. There are combinations which 10 years ago would have been unrelated which are now actively sought as requirements.
In other words, it comes down to experience. And thus my ephiphany.
There are days when I am completely unmotivated at work. Days where I feel my effort is wasted and ignored. Days when I try to find the motivation - and cannot. But the experience is valuable to my future - everything I do, every task I complete, every experience I gather is something I can use towards a higher position and greater responsibility.
My ephiphany?
Work Hard.
Get Experience.
Leave.
If one only relies on motivation from the current job, one will inevitably fall short of accomplishing all that one can there. Efforts will be ignored, thanks not given. However, if one can find in the tasks the promise of taking the experiences somewhere else, the work has at least some purpose beyond the immediate accomplishment of tasks: it builds your body of knowledge and what you have done.
But in this world it always needs to be conducted within the context of the greater whole. I am not just working hard to work hard. I am working hard to get the experience, to get the experience (or education or skills - fill in the blank) to move forward in my life; ultimately, to leave.
Is this a panacea for all things work related? Not at all. The environment may still be toxic. People may still be difficult to work with. But at least the effort spent every day is not wasted. It has the power of transmutation, of being transformed from lead into gold in the future. We need only use it that way to make it so.
Work Hard.
Get Experience.
Leave.
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Monday, October 21, 2013
Proof III
I am excited because this looks like a real book - about 180 pages long - and represents my most significant attempt at writing to date - as you may recall, the genesis for this book was almost a year ago during National Novel Writing Month. It is 50,000 words (more or less) - in other words, an actual book.
Going through the proof has been a little depressing - although I reviewed it three different times, I am still shocked at the amount of errors that I have missed. That, of course, is a little disheartening as one continues to find them. But I have to keep things in perspective: 1) It is about 50,000 words; and 2) I have no editorial staff (except myself) to catch these things. Sometimes I am my own worst enemy.
But I need to makes sure that I do not lose the larger picture. I have received back a proof - by the end of the month, I will achieve the goal of having released it. In terms of writing, that now makes three books that I have self published - three books that, at the beginning of 2012, simply did not exist.
Perhaps I cannot do everything, but I can do more than I imagine. I need only make the effort.
Friday, October 18, 2013
Expected Instead of Recognized
It happened to me yesterday. In front a large group of people as part of the recounting of events, the accomplishment of an audit with no observations - arguably an important event - was not even mentioned.
One's mind runs the gamut in such situations. First one lets it pass by. Then one becomes angry, then agitated, finally settling into a simmering heat. Two weeks of preparation. 3 days of effort, accomplishing nothing else. All to have it swept under the carpet.
This is one of the questions I have added to my repertoire of questions during interviews: "How do you recognize and reward achievement?" It is a bold question, I know. But I have come to realize that how companies portray their recognition of effort is how the ultimately treat those that work for them.
To treat the extraordinary as ordinary is to ensure that efforts will become minimized. There is nothing more enervating that to demonstrate in actions that the effort that everyone claims they want to see is nothing more than something to be expected - and ignored.
For me? There is nothing much to do at the present time: any public display of "look at me" looks exactly like the petulant activity it is designed to be. It will hardly change the course of my year. But it does (perhaps finally) give me some of the clarity that I have been seeking.
As Seth Godin would say, in today's economy no-one is going to pick you. Pick yourself.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
People Who Do Not Want To Win
Oh, they say the do. They say they want to reach their goals or be the boss or win the lottery. They say they want to see something through to completion or make the change that changes everything. But in point of fact, they do not really want to.
Why? This puzzled me a bit. After all, is not winning - however you define that - the goal? Is not moving forward towards victory - be it an election or a simple thing like losing 10 pounds - the point of what we want to do? If we do not, life simply becomes a series of tasks that we have to life through, a treadmill which we on which we are constantly moving but never moving forward.
I think I know why.
Many people do not want to win because they have not been taught how to win.
What is winning? Winning is victory. It is an outcome which you sought and achieved. It is the 10 lbs lost. It is the local election won. It is the race you finished, even if you were the last one.
But winning - just winning - does not stop there. There is always the next step.
Sports teams understand this. It is called the season. There is are a series of games in it. The team plays each one. How foolish would it seem if the team decided after their first win "We are done! We have made it!" - and then proceeded to lose the rest of the games. No one would call them winners. We would call them losers.
Is there an ultimate win? Of course. It is called the championship. Even then, with the trophy and the acclaim, there is still another season, another set of games to win.
We have become trained to accomplish tasks, to check things off our lists. We have not been trained to win - and by win I mean not only achieve the victory, but realize that there is another win, another task, another goal to complete.
Winning is not static and passive. It is active and ongoing. Those that are winners understand this. Those that do not will feebly achieve once or twice, sigh, and then declare that that they do not have the ability to win.
Be different. Be a winner.
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Letting Go of the Need for Pleasing Others
This is an old feeling, one that stems from a long way back in my own history. It is not a bad quality in general of course: if people feel pleasantly about your or concerning you, they are more likely to help you out or do what you ask. That is a fine thing and certainly a cornerstone of general human interactions. But it tends to consume your life when in moves into the personal realm as well.
It becomes an anchor - a thing which constantly holds one back from doing or trying other things. One is always concerned with what others are thinking about you and how that impacts whether or not they like (or even love) you. All one's actions become a series of carefully constructed events, while one carefully watches out of one's eye for the slightest hint (real or imagined) that the other either likes or dislikes what is being done. Even the slightest hint of disapproval is enough to stop enjoyment of an activity; even the slightest hint of approval is enough to propel one into greater efforts.
This is a fool's game, of course: one becomes a construct of the likes and dislikes of others rather than one's own person. Not only are interests and activities pursued based on what the other may think, but unchecked our very lives become not our own but what we think someone else things our lives should be like.
It is a terrible way to live.
What is the solution? The simplest and yet most difficult of all things: simply be yourself.
Simply be yourself, unfettered by the potential likes or dislikes of those around you. Pursue - truly pursue - those things which interest you. Pay scant attention to those whose approval you used to seek as to their opinion of it. Whether they like or dislike it is neither indicator of their level of like or dislike of you nor of the value you have as a person.
Because in the end, you will be you. Truly you. You will find those kindred spirits for whom such things hold interest. And you will also find that the opinions of those who you thought mattered did not really matter at all.
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Unable to Compete
Oh, not in Highland Athletics or Running or Iaijustu or any of the other activities I do. There, I will continue to compete, even if I am always destined to be in the rear of the pack. No, my inability to compete lies largely with much of the world.
I am not as exciting as a TV program. I am not as interesting as Pintrest. I am not as riveting as a sporting event.
I confess that for years this bothered me - after all, I am a person and therefore by default should be of more interest. But what I've come to realize is that by forcing such interest, one accomplishes nothing.
It was very much like this when I was in high school and even college trying date. The lengths I would go to so that I was interesting, the amount of effort I would spend constantly be in the world of the person I was pursuing - all so that I would be seen as someone interesting and desirable and worthy of attention.
It never quite worked out, of course - the problem with trying to generate interest in one's self is that unless real interest is there, the whole structure falls apart as soon as attention is distracted from it. It is an interest that has to be constantly maintained to be active, which becomes not an interest at all but rather almost a marketing campaign which will fail as soon as the next model comes along.
And thus, the simple acceptance that I am unable to compete.
Am I worried? Surely not - I have plenty to occupy my time and plenty of people around me who grace me with their friendship not because of anything I inherently have or can do but simply because we are kindred spirits. And surely at some point the interest will turn: the show will run out of seasons, the website will get old, the season will end.
And I will still be here - perhaps not as flashy as the rest but secure in the fact instead of wasting my time and energy competing, I have simply continued on in being and doing.
Monday, October 14, 2013
Pause
My life feels....lost. In translation. Or maybe in transition. I am not really sure how to regard it.
I am not sure who I feel like. Certainly not myself - or the way I perceive myself. Sure, I go through all the motions of the life that I lead. I do the things that I have always done. I interact with the family that I have interacted. And yet there seems to be a disconnect between these activities and me.
Maybe interacting with high school students more has me thinking - thinking about when I was in school and how the world was a blank canvas ready to be painted on, where in so many ways I did not realize or accept the concept of things I could and could not do. When possibilities seemed endless. When things such as honor and romance still seemed alive - the old style, as in the High Middle Ages or the great sagas of Japan..
When the people I enjoyed spending time with - my friends - were the ones I spent almost all my time with, not snippets of phone conversations and short electronic posts wedged into our lives.
I understand we cannot go back in time and in many ways I would not want to. Still, that enthusiasm and the possibilities that lay before us tantalize me with the phantom-like appearance that comes to me through association. It almost becomes a longing as I go through my essentially pre-programmed day of activities and items I need to do.
Is this it? Is this all there really is to being where I am today? If not, where does the renewed promise of such enthusiasm and zest and belief come from?
Friday, October 11, 2013
Manuscript
This has been a long uphill battle - not the writing so much (that was completed in November of last year) as the editing. Part of my reluctance has been the initial comments that I received and the subsequent doubts that I had about what I wrote; some of it was simply an output of the fact that editing is not something I have done a great deal of and so I am slow at.
Either way, the task is done.
I will make my corrections and upload the manuscript and order the physical proof. Assuming there is nothing that is significantly wrong that cannot be corrected via word processing, the book will be ready to release.
How do I feel about it? More of a sense of relief than anything else. This has been nagging at my mind for almost a year now, wanting to get completed so I can mentally move on to the next project. There is something to the quote "Artists ship" by Steve Jobs - not only from the idea that things need to be moved to completion and out the door, but that we need to complete our projects so that we can mentally and spiritually move on to the next one.
Nanowrimo is coming. I want to be writing.
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Hit
What surprised me about it was her reaction. We got out, looked at the damage, and exchanged information. She was a little shaken (unsurprisingly). I was more concerned about her than the car. Her response to the incident was something along the lines of being surprised and grateful that I was taking things so well.
I shrugged it off at the time but thought about it later. I truly wasn't all that concerned. The biggest issue - her health and my own - seemed intact. Accidents happen - and we usually don't intend them to, that is why we call them accidents - so it is not as if we plan them to. The cars, although nice, are simply things. They can be repaired or totaled - and I don't get to control that process at all.
I carried on until, driving later, I passed three cars pulling off the road. Looked like a small rear end accident. The damage to the car did not seem to be near that of the one that hit me and the car that was "hit" had no visible damage. But you could tell the driver that had been hit - her body language and her short conversation to the driver of the other car indicated that such a thing was a very big deal. It was going to be an unpleasant incident - and the police would undoubtedly show up for this one.
Is this what we've become? A society that is so concerned about our things and our place in them that we expect people to explode when things like accidents occur? Where we believe that we have a right to our anger for our inconvenience? Where we have blurred the lines of importance to where things truly are seen as equal to individuals? Where worrying about the impact on our lives overshadows the other individual involved?
I was in an accident yesterday. My car will need to be repaired. No-one was injured.
There really are more crucial things to my life - and to all of our lives.
Wednesday, October 09, 2013
Collapsed Cheese
This has been something which I have had to temporarily suspend due to our impending move, and then our move, and then our unpacking. The situation with cheese making is not so much that it requires a lot of time - it does not - as much as it requires focused attention at certain points in the process: hold for this long, slowly stir for this long, press for this long, etc. It requires focus which can happen as an adjunct to other activities but they need to be able to be dropped at a moment.
I was making English Farmhouse Cheese, a relatively simple cheese that I have often made: hold 75 minutes, cut the curds, drain into molds and flip. The first three steps went perfectly. The last was a bit of a problem, as it often seems to be.
The nature of the cheese draining is that it is accomplished by gravity: as the whey settles out, the curds are pressed together. At some point one turns over the mold to get the cheese out. Herein lies the difficulty: wait too long and the cheese will not drop consistently but rather in pieces, wait too short and the cheese will loose its shape as there is still too much whey in the curds.
This was one of the too short days: the cheese either collapsed or completely lost its shape. It is initially very disappointing of course, as the cheese looks terrible. I started mentally kicking myself and reminding myself of how I cannot do anything.
And then I tasted it. Still tasted the same.
I took a moment to reflect - the cheese is going nowhere but in our house. The Ravishing Mrs. TB and Na Clann do not care how the cheese looks, just how it tastes. Yes, it would be better if it was visually attractive - but for the purpose for which it was to be used it was just fine.
It was good reminder to myself not only of how sometimes the end result is not as important as the process. It was also a good accountability as to continuing to do something - to often I fail in executing and then suddenly retreat from an activity, decreeing that I am not good enough - and never will be.
The reality is this: sometimes it looks good, sometimes it does not. The cheese, however, will still taste the same.
Tuesday, October 08, 2013
Monday, October 07, 2013
The Last Good Day
It was Halloween last year. We were still located in the old back area, with its ghosts of the previous employees still haunting the cubes. Fear Mor had decided that we were going to enter the pumpkin carving contest so he had procured a pumpkin and set of tools. An Ghearmannaich went one better: find a dremel tool, he began carving a quail into the side of the pumpkin. Fear Beag was on the sidelines making commentary, and The Other was in the corner, watching.
I call it the last good day because it is the last time I can remember us as a department having a good time together. We were all getting along, we were all located near each other and there was a genuine sense that we were meshed as a unit. There was laughter and jokes and sarcasm and probably some off-color comments as well. It felt like everything that a good work team environment should be.
Nothing, of course, lasts forever.
Relationships frayed (as they always do) to the point some would not talk with others. People left - first Fear Mor, then The Other, and finally An Ghearmannaich. The space has changed as well - perceived as being too far away (and taking up too much space), we were relocated in the building: 3 of us crammed up together in a space for 2 and the 2 others put halfway across the building (until they too both left, leaving us as a small appendix in a larger building).
That space has become doubly haunted now - not just by the ghosts of previous employees but by the ghosts of us, wandering through the file cabinets with their documents that scarcely anyone will review again. When I am back there I occasionally hear the laughter in the depths of the solitude.
This almost Halloween - scarcely a year later - it will be myself and Fear Beag to celebrate the holiday. I doubt we will be carving a pumpkin this year, or even thinking about going to the general celebrations. There's something about a real life haunting - a haunting of the soul - that leaves one somewhat chary of engaging in a party pretending to celebrate the same thing.
Friday, October 04, 2013
Oscillation
I find myself either excited or frustrated, angry or relatively satisfied. I suppose the oscillation itself is something one can learn to live with. What bothers me is the unbalance between these two states: I find myself far more frustrated and angry than excited and relatively satisfied.
Where does the anger and frustration come from? Lately (as you may have gleaned from my writings) it is largely stemming from my work: not so much the work per se, but the great extent to which I feel powerless to impact or change things in any meaningful way. Instead, the ability to do anything other than tasks - i.e. change policy or make significant tasks - is extraordinarily limited.
Maybe it has been this way everywhere else I have been. Memory is always faulty of course, and I may very well be wrong on this. But with one exception in which the circumstances were similar, I can scarcely recall a time that I have felt so unable to do more than simply execute work.
And maybe that is the core of the problem. I want to do more. I want to be able to set policy, to a make a difference, to impact people's lives. Too often in my current role my ability to do all of these seems extraordinarily limited.
A couple of things have come out of this experience which I need to capitalize on:
1) The choice of who is above you is critical. A bad manager completely makes the difference between a bearable job and a prison.
2) I have limited patience in and stomach for personnel related issues. I enjoy working with people in my group as primus inter pares, or first among equals. I do not do well in hierarchies.
3) I want to be able to make a difference in people's lives and impact them - not just necessarily in ways to just make them feel better but in ways that make a difference in the lives.
I am not sure what to do with information. I am relatively sure none of this can be implemented in my current role in a way that would truly satisfy these longings. Perhaps there is nothing more to take away than to remember that, as someone has said, your next decision is your best decision.
Thursday, October 03, 2013
Moments of Clarity
Such a thing happened to me yesterday.
It was a meeting that many who work in the corporate world will be familiar with: the HR meeting, where the process of dealing with employee difficulties (opportunities for improvement, if you will) was being reviewed. The presentation was more entertaining than most but much of the content still the same from any HR presentation one would recognize. And then, suddenly tucked away in time midst of a discussion of supervisors came the following statement: "If employees don't like their supervisors, they're free to vote with their feet."
It just hung there for a moment, floating in air. Someone apparently did not understand it and questioned it again and the same words came out: "If employees don't like their supervisors, they're free to vote with their feet. They can leave."
The world became piercingly sharp in its clarity for a moment.
The implications were obvious. After all of the discussion we had just had concerning how supervisors were to help guide their employees and deal with issues, the equivalent relationship - that of how employees deal with their supervisors - was summarily addressed: "If employees don't like their supervisors, they're free to vote with their feet."
All of a sudden much of my consternation melted away.
Why? Because there was no longer any need to bear it. There was no need to be hopeful or even concerned that such things would change - because as a matter of policy, they would not. Management would not - except, I assume, in extreme circumstances - hold supervisors to the same process and program that they would hold employees. The relationships above are less relationships than they are religious relationships: take what is given to you, and like it. If not, find a new religion.
Or new workplace.
Things did not change other things, of course. My job will be the same this morning as it was yesterday. But I go to work this morning with a clarity of understanding that I did not have yesterday. We are often taught that we can - and should - change things if they are incorrect or wrong. What I realized yesterday is that this is simply not only true. The only thing you can truly change is yourself. And if changing yourself does not resolve the issue, perhaps it is best to realize that voting with your feet is the best path towards making a better tomorrow for yourself.
Wednesday, October 02, 2013
Tuesday, October 01, 2013
Struggling
I feel powerless to change anything. My life seems completely overtaken by events beyond my ability to change them.
Work is slowly devolving into a long list of things that simply needs to be done - and not enough people to do them. The impending departure of An Ghearmannich and the absence of Fear Beag has given me a taste of what life will be like from here on out: too much work, too much quiet, no spirit. In other words, a typical office environment.
The triumph of the status quo has not helped either. Within two weeks we will be right back where we were, sacrificing another period of time to do another update meeting for another set of people who won't be doing any of the work. The changes I kept hoping would come - daring I use the word fantasizing would come? - have not arrived. I am reminded, yet again, that I am merely someone to do the work that others command - and make it ridiculously easy for them to do in the process.
More help? Unknown. The appropriate paperwork was filed. That said, the filing of paperwork is scarcely a guarantee of anything, let alone of actually getting the help one needs. And that is just the listing of the position - there is still the culling, the interviewing, the realization that you will probably not get what you had.
All the time grappling with the concept that your department has one of the most critical roles in the company - as defined by law - and yet it has the least of people to carry them out.
Home feels little better. Our lives have devolved into a series of schedules, transporting one here and another there and making sure things happen on time. Add to this the daily things that simply need to be done in life - dishes washed, clothes put away, general picking up - and suddenly the time has simply been whisked away.
I try to convince myself that my feelings are deriving from a lack of sleep so I try to go to bed earlier. I am unsuccessful in my effort as I still seem to wake up the same amounts of time - and everything that has to be done is still there.
I am trying to find some shred of encouragement, so sign that all of this is leading to some greater end that I simply cannot see right now. All I seem to keep coming back to is a list of e-mails in the in-box of my life, all bearing tasks to do or requests to do things which have not been done.
There are times, I suppose, I dreamed of being a leader. I find I am simply a doer of tasks.
Monday, September 30, 2013
Asserting One's Self
Assertive: Disposed to or characterized by bold or confident statements and behavior
It has shown itself in a plethora of small ways: deciding to sell the car - and then deciding to ask twice what I was going to, and getting it. Making the decision I was going to go to the Highland Games - and going. Making decisions about what will be prioritized at work instead of patiently waiting for others to decide. Deciding what and when will be used for a gardening area.
All good. All empowering.
But we discovered a second thing as well: that assertiveness practiced in an atmosphere of hierarchy is counterproductive.
There is nothing more discouraging than making a decision or planning a course only to be overruled by someone else - especially when that someone has little idea of what is actually being discussed or is completely disconnected from the matter at hand. It turns assertiveness into a cauldron filled with resentment and anger as one's decision is unable to be acted upon - instead, one has to follow the dictates of someone that may have other knowledge (but never shares it) or is completely disconnected but feels the need to be "in control".
The solution? Simple yet difficult. If one does best in circumstances where one can act assertively, be in those situations. If the situation you are in does not allow you to do that, change your situation.
As I said, simple yet difficult. But is the difficulty really more than that which I currently endure: the crushing weight of being unable to make decisions (but having to execute everyone else's) and yet being expected to "take the initiative"?
If I can be assertive - and if I need to be assertive to move forward in my own life - then I simply need to accept that, ultimately, I need to put myself in those sorts of situations. My ability to grow may very well depend on it.
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Yay Bogha Frois!
http://www.etsy.com/shop/vesnasspringmix
No. Seriously. Go look right now.
Friday, September 27, 2013
Assets
Bogha Frois has been encouraging me for some time now to do one thing a day to get started. There are days where this seems impossible but every day she keeps encouraging me: one thing. Do one thing.
So I decided to make a list of my assets.
The list started simply enough: in digging through a desk drawer I found a headpiece for the computer that was still in the bag - the sort you can use for online calls or learning. Internet, of course. My laptop.
But as I continued I found the list expanding: hand tools. Gardening Tools. Library of books on specific subjects. Garden area. A small pad in my back yard one could put an open outbuilding on. A harp. Bokutos. Cheese making equipment. Before I realized it, I had constructed a list - not so much of things that were just around, but things that had the potential to be used for something.
My intention is to expand this list to other areas: skills and abilities and expertise. From here, my hope is that I can use this to begin to generate ideas for some sort of alternate plan.
Is it likely that my hand tools or even my small pad will help me generate income? Not necessarily. But what I did find is that it generated a great deal of thought about how I could use these items.
And figuring how one can use something is the first step in one learning to use something.
Thursday, September 26, 2013
Cog
Such a reminder came crashing down on me yesterday as I went to my day. Being 25% reduced in effective labor status (with no real end in sight) means that work has rapidly begun piling up and suddenly the concept of "working manager" becomes all too clear: what to do first (five things, of course) and what to let slip. It all has to be done, of course - nobody particular cares how or where it is done or truly how much more there is to do than what is there - but that is not their problem, of course. It is yours. You are the cog that makes it happen.
Then, of course, one gets smacked with the politics of office. No matter how carefully I have attempted to cultivate changes in how reporting structures work I continue to discover that mine remains the same. My job, in my reporting structure, is essentially to be responsible for all aspects of what my department is while being carefully denied the title and recognition of actually being responsible for it all - in other words, "Set everything up, make sure you come by to bow at the altar of Senior Management to bask in the warm glow of their ideas, and then go off and do the work. And oh - please be sure that you credit the Great Manager with all that has gone well and direct all credit our way. If you fail, of course, you are own your own."
I have diligently worked to try to find to do what was asked, to make things better, to get over that hump of doing all but not being the person recognized for it. Instead, I find that although so many people are sympathetic to the problem, no-one really wants to do anything. The cost of challenging the status quo - the thing that employees are so often enjoined to do to move companies forward - does not pan out when you reach a higher playing field.
And so I find myself exactly where I have told recruiters two years ago, three years ago that I would be: doing the same thing again and again with little chance for advancement or growth - or even a change in how thing work. Because ultimate the concern is simply that the work gets done - and the work, theoretically, could be done by anyone.
As long as they understand that they are simply a cog.
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Best Effort
I struggle with this.
I struggle with this because so many of jobs - this one included - seem precisely opposite of this. The world so often seems opposite of this. The sense that no matter what I do my effort does not matter - in fact, it is eaten up and dispersed into a nether region of space. I hear the tramp of "responsibility" and "authority" tramp down the halls with no relation to any sort of goal or reward.
What would my best shot look like? That is the part that both concerns me and makes me wonder. What would unbridled effort at being the best at my job truly look like? And would it be recognized as such? Or would it just fade into the background noise of what is expected from everyone, leaving me that much farther behind the curve?
Or is my focus all wrong?
Perhaps it is what it does to us that is the real point of the exercise. Ultimately the job has multiple factors which we cannot control: financing, management, failed projects, acquisitions, layoffs. It is what we become in spite of these things that is the true benefit of giving our best effort. If I think about it, I am forced to admit that I have seldom carried a job out with me. What I have carried out is myself and everything I did and became during that time.
If self development is the goal and the path to getting to job we ultimately want, why are we not giving more of our best effort - not for the job, but for ourselves?
Monday, September 23, 2013
The Bitters
I have been doing it for a number of years, an outgrowth of one of the authors (Brian Tracy) that I read: "Find a useful quote. Send it to fifty people." And so, over the years, I have been collecting quotes from everywhere: literature, audio books, business books, the internet itself. Over time my planners have filled up in the back - and rolled to the front - with the quotes I have gotten.
Thanks to the wonder of Facebook and Twitter, I have the mechanism for the outreach of quotes: every day Monday through Friday I post one or two. I post one around general life or achievement and one that tends to be around some aspect of business. The pleasure comes from seeing people "like" them - an indication that they have found something significant quote. It is a small way for me to feel like I am contributing to the life and achievements of others.
Except.
Some time ago - maybe a year? - I posted a quote (I do not recall what one now) to which someone posted a snarky answer. It surprised me a bit, both because of who did it and the fact that they did it publicly. It depressed me because I always want to encourage, not upset - so much so that I stopped posting them for a while. Time passed of course, and I started posting them again - with the same sort of general "likes" in a day.
Then it happened again.
It rocked me back on my heels again - not just because of who did it but that they did it publicly. I fought the initial response of deleting the post - after all, I think that a third party reading it will find it as jarring as I did and I suppose that is not a bad thing - but I had to circle back and review what I was doing again.
Fortunately this morning I was reading Linchpin by Seth Godin and came across the following quote:
"You can spend your time on stage pleasing the heckler in back, or you can devote it to the audience that came to hear you perform".
Of course. I can pay attention to the 1% that seem intent on voicing their opinion (if you do not agree with somebody, just do not comment or even ignore them), or I can focus on the 99% that seem to be garnering some value out of my daily activity. Where is the correct focus?
Some people just seem to have a case of the bitters. The trick is not to let them dominate your life or ruin your attempts to better it.
Friday, September 20, 2013
Stuck
that I trapped in one place,
that all forward motion has ceased.
But that is how I feel.
Stuck.
The world seems to rush on around me:
People moving forward, lives moving forward -
a blur of motion that goes on the periphery
while I simply stand.
Stuck.
I keep telling myself that things will change,
that the motion is invisible now,
but that invisible
is not the same as not moving
at all.
Stuck.
Or am I fooling myself,
thinking that the point of life is moving forward,
when speeding through life means simply
speeding by life?
Stuck.
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Stepping Out
It is a little terrifying. I do not know that I am doing everything correctly. Sometimes it feels like I am simply adding more work to my life.
But at the same time it is invigorating. It is an interesting feeling when one feels that one has some sense that one is charting one's own course rather than simply walking down a path that others set before you.
One significant change that I have found is that I find myself asking for permission a great deal less. If I understand what needs to be achieved, I will make a plan and go do it. What I am no longer doing - at least not in the formal way - is going and asking for permission prior to asking. I will consult, I will seek opinions - but I will not seek permission. I will act.
I am not quite sure where all of this ends. There is only a finite range to one's leadership at any one company of course; at some point the ability to lead becomes constrained by size and circumstances.
But that is it may be. Right know I am doing - and learning.
Leadership may be a skill to be learned after all. Who knew.
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Paths
Is there ever a view
into other universes,
places, or times:
the great forks in the road of one's life
or even the small random chances
of fate?
What of the might have beens:
the other major,
the other job,
the other person.
the threads of our lives we put aside
to weave the ones that we know now?
Is eternity a singular stream,
or multiple paths,
running to an ocean?
Can we ever meet our other selves?
Would we recognize them if we did?
Or would we find them far different than we are now,
with no more than a surface similarity?
Or is all black beyond
this one path we choose,
leaving darkened pathways behind
never to be crossed again?
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Getting Rid Of, Simplifying
I suppose on one hand this is a good thing, because it enables one to (by default) focus on the few things that one really wants to do (since that is all the time there is); on the other, it is frustrating because even as one tries to cut down to the essentials, time continues to run away and even those things seem beyond reach.
Essentials. I have been thinking about those a great deal lately, propelled by the Steve Jobs biography in two areas. On the one hand, his continued effort to simplify, eliminate and get down to the core purpose of an item; on the other, the very real sense of mortality that hangs over all of us: it is really not so very far from my age that he himself passed away.
Moving helps, of course. The fact that our space arrangement has changed, that we have essentially "settled" on a location to be in (given interest rates, perhaps for quite a while), means that by default we are having to question everything we have: do we need this. Is this essential to what we do as a family? I am having to apply it to my own stuff as well: do I need this? Do I use this? Does this at all fall into the area of essentials that I have identified in my life? If not, I am starting to attempt (sometimes a difficult thing for me) to move it out of my life.
But I am trying to apply this to my own personal, inner life as well. The essentials: what is Toirdhealbheach Beucail about? Who am I as a person? What I am trying do? What is my core purpose and where can I simplify or eliminate elements of my own life - of me - to be more fully true to my purpose?
It is not something I have mastered by any stretch of the imagination - in fact, merely trying to put it into words solidifies my thoughts that this is something I have only unconsciously been working towards and it needs to be more conscious.
But needed. Time continues to compress and run away from me. It would a pity to arrive at that time when horizons begin to expand - or contract completely - and discover that my purpose continues to be buried beneath things real and psychic.
Monday, September 16, 2013
"I Wonder If"
It was subtle enough. I was listing a few things on Craigslist for sale. I looked at the price I had posted on it last time, said "I wonder if", and hiked the price 20%. It sold. I did the same thing with the beloved Protege that we are selling. Even with its age and some issues I looked at what I originally was going post, said "I wonder if", and doubled the price. I received three interested offers; I am sure one of these will buy.
This is atypical behavior for me - usually I approaching things from the point of view of what I think someone is likely to pay - based not on any outside information but rather my own internal voice telling me "It's not that good - and after all, you don't want to be that confrontational." But this time I took a chance - a small one to be sure, and one which was not unrecoverable from if it failed. But still a chance.
And it worked. I cannot tell you the level of confidence I felt after I got those e-mails and had that cash in hand. Suddenly I started looking around thinking "What else can I post and how much can I get?"
I dwell in reality of course - real estate taught me that something is only worth what someone else is willing to pay. But the connection I never made before it is always not best to determine in your own mind what someone else is willing to pay.
But in the larger scope of things, what a subtle change. I moved from a position of helplessness and dependence - "What will they give me? What if they don't like me if I ask too much?" - to a position of strength - "Let me ask. There is no harm in asking."
"I wonder if". What a powerful statement.
What a statement to apply to the rest of my life.
Friday, September 13, 2013
An Unknown Crossing
I know this is not a typical thing for me. But I find myself deeply troubled this evening. An event happened at work which has left me feeling....odd: a coworker left.
Not a planned leaving anyone was aware of. Not a leaving I directly expected. Not a leaving that was mentioned 30 minutes before they left.
An e-mail. And then they were gone.
It troubles me because in my heart of hearts it feels like I was on the wrong side of this equation: one of them. The Bosses. The Man. The Power. The People You Do Not Tell What Is Really Going On.
This bothers me. It bothers me deeply, actually. I hate being left out of the loop - especially when I like to think of myself of someone that is in touch with the pulse of what is going on from day to day: the pulse, the ebb and flow of the environment. Instead, I find myself on the outside looking in: confused, wondering what I could have done better or differently - maybe not avert the actual leaving but to at least be in a position to wish a cheery "Good Luck".
Have I bought into the system that much? Am I trying to "get ahead" in a system or in a way that leaves me isolated from what I was, or what I once hoped to be?
This person was not a silly person - they were intelligent, talented, very capable, fun humorous - exactly the sort of coworker one could hope for. It is always a matter of great concern when such a person leaves.
The second thing - a lesser issue to be sure - is simply the sense of yet another person going. I have seen so many people leave over the last 4 years - many good friends, good people, moving on to better things.
We will go in on Monday. Some sort of announcement will be made of course: the incident will be downplayed, someone else will be brought in, and life will go on. In some fashion the position will be filled - even if the hole in our little dysfunctional family will not.
But it will still leave me with a question as I get up and walk out of the room: what have I become, or what am I perceived as, that I seem to have crossed over a divide I never knew I traveled?
Carla J. Clay Studios
You should really click through and go to her website. Maybe even buy something at her store.
What? You are still here? Go look!
Thursday, September 12, 2013
A Hint of Sadness
Yesterday I took a stop by the company who is the successor to the company that shut down in 2009, the company that led us to new home. The company itself has passed on but the intellectual property - and many of the people - have coalesced at a new company. They seem to have done quite well for themselves, having moved forward in the last three years and broadened their programs to give them breadth. On a whim, I also went to Linked In to see who I knew working there. All of a sudden a name popped up with a title: "Director, X".
It was my old department.
I immediately clicked through to their Linked In profile. It turns out we had actually met once at a job fair long ago. Our paths had dodged around each other as well: they had worked at a company we received product from, they came to the company I left to start the Firm.
I was overwhelmed with despair. That was my position.
Or that should have been my position. I interviewed for it in 2010, when we were back in Old Home. On a lark, I went in. I knew the people. I knew the product. I knew their systems - good heavens, I helped to write them. But I was in New Home at the time, and would have needed moving assistance to come back. They were a small company and so (not unreasonably) they opted to go with a local consultant and then eventually a Director. The Director whose profile I saw.
I slumped in my chair a bit. This is the worst of all feelings - not that have had an opportunity and blown it, but that you were denied the opportunity in the first place and so never had the opportunity to blow it.
One can make the argument that it makes things seem even worse when such a think arises. I suppose that's true. But when one is never really happy in the first place it just seems to rub salt in the wound, especially when opportunity (or at least the hope of it) seems to have abandoned the shores of your life.
I will keep up with company, of course. They are doing really novel and important work in their field, the sort of thing that if it succeeds could be a game changer. But I will always be watching with a trace of sadness as I hopefully see them march from success to success - for they are marching forward, while I seem stuck in place.
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
Shipping
Monday, September 09, 2013
The Space Beside The Bed
Friday, September 06, 2013
Stumped
Is this because of my own expectations? Have I convinced myself that the important part is not so much me expressing myself in hopes of somehow impacting someone else as it is me wanting fame and fortune showered upon me because, for once in my life, I finally showed up with 100% effort?
The finishing is the thing. Anything I realize from it is merely frosting on the cake of accomplishment.
Thursday, September 05, 2013
Wednesday, September 04, 2013
Retaking the Initiative
The reality of our retooling is much less exciting.
Tuesday, September 03, 2013
An Unexpected Interlude
What is up, you may have asked? Did a vacation suddenly loom that was unexpected? Did a horrible tragedy occur that has kept him from writing? Or has he merely become a bit lazy?
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
A Useful Filter
She sent me this link yesterday:
http://www.marieforleo.com/2011/07/great-opportunities-vs-time-wasters/
I have never heard of Mario Forleo before. Apparently (judging by the pictures on her website) she has been on Oprah so she has some level of fame.
But her genius was revealed in the short clip above.
The point of the video is simply not that you have goals, but that you have a "filter" - a single question which you ask about everything you do. Based on your goal, you simply ask "Will this help me to do my goal?" If it does, you do it. If not, you do not.
What a simple yet profound concept.
Energized by this thought I sat down and made a list of things that I wanted to do in the short term. For each of these goals - financial, physical, career, intellectual, spiritual, personal - I wrote the simple question:
"Will this help me become a published author?"
"Will this help me master the shoden body of knowledge?"
"Will this help me become a stronger Christian?"
"Will this help me move towards a new career?"
And so on.
The beauty of this is that it is not complicated. It is simple. It is a single question. It has two possible answers: yes (it will move me forward) or no (it will not move me forward). And based on this, one then simple acts in accordance with the answer.
Simple.
Elegant.
Easy.
Profound.
I love it.
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Monday, August 26, 2013
Just Run
Such an event happened over the last weekend with Fear Beag.
I watched Fear Beag over the last four years of our acquaintance as he has developed a sense of personal health, moving from a smoker and non-exerciser to a casual runner to a dedicated runner. It has been a pleasure - not only for the health benefits of course, but in the development of his character and his way of looking at life. He has developed from someone who could barely run around the block to someone who is contemplating 3 marathons this year.
He has been recently troubled by a leg injury - he has explained it multiple times, I think it involves a muscle of some kind - to the point he has had to pull back on his running. It has troubled him to the point that he had numerous visits with a massage practitioner, icing and heating - anything to relieve the pain and get running again.
He has slowly been getting better but continues to be plagued by this injury. He constantly laments his lack of distance, his time, his desire to be out on the course running.
Finally, he had an epiphany. He was even kind enough to share it with the rest of us.
He posted that he was running and after one mile, was having issues. Then, to paraphrase him, "I just gave up. I gave up on Garmin time, on pace, on distance, on the perceived pain and just started running."
I read this post and was struck breathless by the thought.
How true is this for my own life - to get to the point that one simply surrenders one's concern about everything that is involved in an activity and simply do the activity? How often am I concerned with how I am doing this or that, how this or that looks, how much progress I am making - and forget to pay attention to the fact that I am doing the activity at all?
Musashi would have recognized this. The great swordsmen of the past would have recognized this. This, to them, was the beginning of true mastery: having learned the basics, one begins to become more concerned with the exercise of the art. By internalizing and then acting on that internalization unconsciously one achieves not only mastery, one begins to develop one's own style and technique - in effect, one truly becomes one's self.
Strangely enough, this post gave me hope - not so much hope that the immediate arena of my own life will change, but the hope that by simply letting all the technical concerns and reasons not to do something fall away, the core of who I am - of what I am trying to do - will reveal itself.
Fear Beag will run his races - and do very well, I do not doubt. I am hopeful that his blazing the trail will allow me to run my own races of life with equal clarity of mind.
Friday, August 23, 2013
All I Know
You bruise me
We both bruise so easily
Too easily to let it show
I love you and that's all I know
And all my plans
Keep fallin' through
All my plans, they
Depend on you
Depend on you
To help them grow
I love you
And that's all I know
When the singer's gone
Let the song go on
There's a fine line between
The darkness and the dawn
They say in the darkest night
There's a light beyond
And the ending always
Comes at last
Endings always
Come too fast
They come too fast
And they pass too slow
I love you
And that's all, it's really all I know
It's all I know
It's all I know.
- Five for Fighting
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Mid Life
What differentiates such a thing from the run of the mill personality crisis? Is it the age? Is it the intensity? Is it the feeling that one has spent the last 25+ years of one's life chasing paths that were not necessarily the most desirable ones?
It is hard to question such a thing, of course. Merely to suggest it is to set off warning signals in some, which is perhaps why we do not discuss such a thing in the first place. The question "Are you happy? No, I mean really happy?" inevitably triggers reactions where none may be required.
It is still a question, of course. One I am grappling with now.
Is life terrible? No, far from it. We have a new house. We have good jobs. Na Clann are doing well in school and in their personal lives. We recently got a new-to-us car. I have activities and friends. Certainly I am in no crisis mode.
But is this it?
This is the question I grapple with almost daily now as I rise. Is this it: the morning routine, the commute to the career that was not the aspiration of my life, the commute home, the seeming externalities of family living, the wedging in of things that I enjoy to do, and then to sleep to rise to do it all over again. Is this it?
Where is passion? Where is excitement? Where is that living on the wild edge that pulses the heart and excites the spirit? Where is that anticipation of looking forward to every day as if it were a new present to be unwrapped and enjoyed?
There is a heavy sense of gray about my existence - not the black of depression or the red of anger, but simply the gray of monotony. The pounding realization that fundamentally, tomorrow will be like today which will be like the last series of years.
Where is the relief to this? Not relief in the sense of a lifting depression where my spirits raise but rather in the relief in the sense of a life which offers that excitement, that passion, that "I am alive!" sense that I so much miss now.
I wish I knew. But the world - the real world, at least my real world - beckons with its rounds of mundane tasks needing attention.
And that sense of I should be doing more, I should be living more, I simply should be alive will go back into the small part of my soul where I store such things - the small garden of my life where such things still flourish.
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Man of Action, Man of Vision
Oh, I know what people will say: I am. Yes, in the sense that there are a great many things that I will do, yes I am. I have done things that I never would have contemplated years ago: made cheese, practiced iaido, threw weights, grew a garden, ran races, played the harp, wrote some books.
But a man of action? In the classic sense of the word? That hardly seems to fit my conception of myself.
When I think of men of action I think of the bold ones, the great ones, the ones who painted across the canvas of life with a broad brush, who change the conceptions of how we view entire technologies or ways of doing business or even something as simply as a cup of coffee. These men hold a secret longing and aspiration in my heart.
Why? Because they seem to exude self confidence, a sense of knowing their place in the world and where they are heading to. They have a vision - be it a political system or the height of an art of a new way of doing business or even a fantastic way for impacting things for Christ - which they use a a motive power both to fuel them and to guide their day to day actions.
I lack this vision, this self confidence, this guiding inner picture of what it is I am here to do and how I am to accomplish it. Instead I seem to lurch from side to side, taking in a project here, dabbling in something there, but never really using these interests in a grander sense of moving towards it: the thing, the goal, the vision.
How does one acquire such a thing? Is it something one is born with? Is it something that magically comes to one in the night? Is it hours of reflection and meditation? Or is it simply in a blinding flash of serendipity, the bolt from the blue that makes is sit upright?
I wish I knew. All I do know is that I feel as if I am continuing to chase my tail while the richness and greatness of what is possible rolls by me like waves, bearing others up on the surf even as I simply float along.
Monday, August 19, 2013
Silence
I was struck by yesterday morning as I sat and read a portion of a biography of Miyamoto Musashi. It was early Sunday morning. No-one but The Ravishing Mrs. TB was up as I sat on the couch in the new Taigh an TB, sipping my coffee and reading, listening to the rabbits occasionally hop about or eat. Church was hours later and unpacking had, for the short term, ceased.
I found such peace in that moment, such joy, such a sense of being recharged in my life. The thoughts poured off of the page and into my brain and lodged themselves there, unlike so often where they seem to skitter off the top of my mind like birdseed. There was a sense of truly taking in what I was read and having the luxury of actually chewing the thoughts over in my head, evaluating them, personalizing them, even thinking of ways that they could be applied in my life.
Why can I not find more time for such silence in my life?
I am a person of silences and quiet. This is the world I grew up in; this is how I spent my time: alone or in a small group of people, with time and space enough to take my thoughts and make them into shining gems to apply within my own life. A place and time where dreams and thoughts and creativity flourished in the protective environment of freedom and peaceful aloneness.
Could this be one of the reasons that I so often find myself out of sorts now, lacking creativity and the energy to pursue it? My life is hardly filled with silence now, rather with the seeming tsunami of sound and disturbance that comes from the living in the modern world. My space is constantly filled with people and conversation and noise and the needs and wants of others.
It is enough to drive anyone mad.
Perhaps the first step then is this: to find a place in my life where, for 15 minutes (to start) I can be totally in peace and silence. If for no other reason than to rediscover a now-unknown country: to rediscover myself.
Monday, August 12, 2013
Administrative Note
Last Run
It is an odd thing, to gear up and go out and realize in the back of your mind that the likelihood that you will be running this course will be very small indeed. Every passing footstep means that you are moving one step farther away from ever running this course again.
The flat straights and streets, the yards lit at night and various yard decorations which acquire fiendish appearances in the early morning darkness will disappear into the well of your memory. The mileage that you have memorized so well - 3.2, 4.09, 5.16 - will not be calculated anymore.
You will find new course to run with their own mileage, their own fiendish appearances, their own decorations. They will become the new reality of your run, and eventually you will come to know them as you have known these routes.
But what you will miss more than all is the last turn on the run. It was this turn that meant that you had essentially achieved the distance you were going to run. It was the sign that the last part of the run was going to begin, with home and coffee soon to follow. In a sense that last turn has become the real last turn: tomorrow and every day after this you will find that place no longer has any meaning outside of that time in your life.
Friday, August 09, 2013
Thursday, August 08, 2013
Bargain
In a bargain two parties agree that they will exchange something for something else. It can be as simple as "Here is 20 bucks; mow my lawn" to "Here is my trust; give me yours." In both of these cases - and in all of the gradations in between - there is a certain element of understanding: I do my part, you do your part, and bargain will be complete.
So what happens when someone fails to hold up their end of the bargain?
This also takes many forms. It is as simple as failing to do what you said to do and as complex as failing to support someone else in a time of change when they needed it. In these cases, and all the cases they bracket, the central aspect of understanding, of trust, is broken.
The realization that this has occurred is frustrating beyond words. Suddenly all that you believed to be true - all that you worked for based on an assumption of an understanding - is ended. Your effort is not totally wasted in its effect, but perhaps in its ultimate outcome. You are left holding the sides of a bag which you thought was going to be full only to discover that the bag has a hole in the bottom, leaving you with a circle of fabric in your hands.
Real life does not stop going on at this point of course: work still has to be accomplished, relationships still have to be maintained, the daily aspects of living go on. But they lose a sense of building towards something else, something greater: they lose the sense of reaching that bargain that was agreed to.
What does one do in such circumstances? One can attempt to simply muscle through the event, laughing at fate and sneering at the foibles of human nature. This works for a while but ultimately seems to lead nowhere: the agreement which was not met seems to become the new standard perhaps simply from assumption that things seem to be continuing in a forward direction. They may from the outside of course; the reality is that the energy sustaining the effort dwindles over time, bereft of renewal from a sense of continuing to keep the bargain.
How does one renegotiate such a bargain?
Wednesday, August 07, 2013
Change
What do you think about, you might ask. Do you think about arriving back at home? Do you think about where you have been?
Mostly I thought about my life.
My life seems to be in a large state of flux at the moment. Between leaving to go to Old Home and drive back and the move and the work I need to get down while both of the other of these are happening I am feeling stretched.
But I am feeling stretched internally as well.
I am at the point that something needs to change. My life has been pushed to the edge of cliff that it was on; the only solution is to climb up or fall down.
The falling part, although theoretically painful, is at least not as frightening to me in the sense that I understand the rocks at the bottom. It is the climb up that frightens me more. Why is this? Because the climb up only seems to promise pain with no reward, the ache of arms and legs to a point that I cannot clearly see or define from here.
And it involves change - of me. I am never very good with change, especially change at involves interactions with other people and with how I view myself in the world and more importantly, how I view myself in my own world.
I sense it and shudder. It involves being brave, standing up, deciding and committing to actions, and following a course. All things I do not feel terribly proficient in.
But I am not sure that I have a choice. The cliff has run out. The rocks threaten below.
Only the path up offers safety - even if it is only the safety of the unknown.
Friday, August 02, 2013
Kata in the Wind
Practicing here versus practicing at home has been somewhat of a wash. On the down side, I brought my second-best bokuto and so perhaps have not totally trained as hard as I could have. On the bright side, I had the opportunity to practice with the wind.
I have commented before on my love of this place because the wind, the silence so deep that the wind blowing through the trees is audible and sensible. It is my place in which God walks through the trees.
And, apparently, practices iaido.
In practicing my kata, my cuts and blocks and footwork, I found myself starting to dance in time with the wind and the trees. A sense of being at one with nature came over my soul as I rose and fell with the blade, the "whoosh" of the trees accompanying my blade's quiet descent. As I continued to move, crunching the brown pine needles beneath my trees, one began to get a sense of how the great swordmasters of the past practiced and trained as well, how they valued so much the time spent training alone with only nature as training partner and watching eye. The most successful of movements are those which are the most natural and mimic real life; dancing with the bokuto among the trees imbued a sense of flow and etheralness to the practical combination of wood and muscle.
I will return to Old Home this week; my studies will submerge themselves back into the routine of dojo and home. But remain hopeful that, even in the returning deluge of urban sound, the sounds of the wind will haunt my blade as it moves through the forms.
Thursday, August 01, 2013
A Fuller Return
The thought occurred to me as I was taking another stroll down the gravel road towards the main road in. I have been coming here for my whole life and looking at the road as I walked up it, I realized how little seems to have changed. Some of the outlines have changed, but the major contours of the land remain the same after four decades - in some cases, the trees have only grown bigger, not moved.
Four decades of coming up and yet I find myself very far away - a place that I always seem to be seeking to return to, in spirit if not in fact. Why is this?
It was at this moment, wandering through the trees, that suddenly the thought of performing kata came to my mind: how much I enjoy Iaido and how much I have learned.
And then came the thoughts of all else that has occurred since we moved: the people we met, the things we have seen, the humidity we have endured (not so notable, of course)and the activities that I have been able to participate in: Iaido, Heavy Athletics, running, cheesemaking, even more rabbits, authoring books.
Would I have found these things if I remained? Possibly. But in going away, what came to my mind is that I have expanded more than what I very well would have had I simply remained where I was.
Does such a thing preclude a return? I do not believe so. Even as I had not planned the going out, so I suspect any return would be a surprise as well: a random event not suspected but ultimately welcomed.
Perhaps that was the great realization as I crunched my way down the road back both to my past and to my future: the going away has not made less attached or less connected but rather more full so that in the event I were to return - or even if I never do - I will find myself greater for the experience.
And I, like the countours of the land I passed by, will be the same even as overlay of my life becomes more vibrant and full.