Making things
I was going to sit down and talk about how hard the past week was…how draining.
And it was, in its way. For whatever reason, there was an abundance of drama over the past eight days—the missed deadlines, botched communication and general fakakta-ness that seems to accompany Mercury going retrograde. (I wonder, could things have been this messed up before I knew about such silly nonsense?)
There was also a paucity of rest. Social engagements out the wazoo, back-to-back, every day but one. Not light-hearted ones: thinking ones. Emotionally draining ones. Ones that required attention, a lot of driving, or both.
Like my ex-husband’s wedding reception, where I was the surprise guest to a raft of folk who hadn’t seen me since I lost them in the divorce eight years ago (let it never be said that my ex doesn’t have a wicked sense of humor…or his new bride, for that matter). Like dinner with the one friend of my dad’s who stood by my sister and me in the ugly, ugly aftermath of his death. Most devastatingly, like the memorial service for a brilliant 26-year-old artist who was stolen from the world too soon. It took three beers, The BF and a Harold Lloyd flick to talk me down from that last night.
I want to run and hide when it gets like this. I want to live in a place where it rains a lot and gets dark early—where I can bundle myself up in a scruffy, fluffy sweater and read books on the sofa with a bottomless mug of peppermint tea. Instead, I live in an overbuilt parking lot with fires breaking out at each end, wearing boxers against the heat and earplugs against the noise. And I have no upholstered furniture. Still.
Fret not, however, for in the midst of all this mishigoss, I am, bizarrely enough, happier than ever. There is work work work and feeling like you do not make a difference, and there is the other kind; right now, and for some time, I feel like I’ve been living the other kind. It’s exhausting, but wonderful. Not particularly lucrative, even, but wonderful. I never felt this way after a day of wrangling copy. Never. Not once. And I did that for 10 years and a lot of money.
Still, this schedule is a brutal one to maintain, and something has to give. It’s kind of been my health, which has to stop, and it’s definitely been my “optional” writing, which also has to stop.
It’s the optional-type writing, you see, that’s made all this possible. I’m starting to get it now. So it really isn’t optional at all for the life I want to live.
People: create. Make things. Think things and write them down, or tell them, or draw them. Note things and mull them over (or not) and pass them along (for sure.) When I get bone-tired like this, I can feel the pull to buy. It’s odd; I feel it. Possibly other people feel the pull to watch TV (I used to feel that, although I’d never give it my full attention) or to play games. Consuming isn’t inherently evil, but it leaves you more empty than full.
Tonight I made a (SCD-legal) pizza and this post. It was all I could muster after a long day of pushing pixels. But that pizza tasted better than anything I could get delivered.
And this post? Even better than that…
xxx
c
Image by Sidereal–who is rapidly becoming a communicatrix staple, it seems–via Flickr, used under a Creative Commons license.
TOPICS: creativity, happiness, life, truth.






8 Comments, Comment or Ping
Jeremy
Quite apart from the Yiddishisms (and isn’t there, somewhere, a dictionary of acceptable spellings, just to please small-minded pedants like myself?) I really enjoyed this post because it seemed to capture a little of what I’ve been feeling of late. A life that is currently too full of hard and often unrewarding stuff, with a leavening of things I want to do (make) and that make the rest of it worthwhile. Like soup and blog posts.
So, thanks again.
Oct 29th, 2007
Bon
Keep mustering. Even if you only ever do it alone. Love yourself more than any of the other stuff. Please. It’s the only reason you are, for us. And we’ll still be here even if you’re forever away from checking back in with any of us. Ever.
XO
Oct 29th, 2007
CSS
I just wanted to say how much I enjoy reading your posts. I look forward to seeing each one in my feed reader, and I always take away something inspirational. Thank you.
Oct 30th, 2007
Mark Silver
Even the pacific northwest has been unseasonably sunny this week, although more rain is coming- and plenty of darkness. You’re welcome to visit any time, you and the BF.
I’ve got a bit of the blahs myself, not quite as severe as you’ve listed. Anyhoo- just one heart to another.
Yes, create things. I like that. maybe tonight will be soup. We’ll see. And, how appropriate- since we can’t actually ‘create’ anything, in the sense of making something where there was nothing, but we can synthesize, transform, remix and renew what’s already here. So, it makes sense that when something dies/breaks/fades that the urge to help whatever is left transform into the new form is what feels most enlivening to the heart.
Oct 30th, 2007
Larry Greenfield
Words fail me, so thank you for bringing them to the party.
Oct 30th, 2007
communicatrix
Jeremy - You know, if I wasn’t so dog-tired/lazy, I’d pull out my grandfather’s copy of Leo Rosten’s “The Joys of Yiddish” from the bookshelf not three feet from my head to check. But I am tired/lazy. And it is *heavy*.
But I am glad you are making soup. Mmm…soup.
Bon - Wise words. And kind, too. Thank you, as usual, for your graciousness.
CSS - And I enjoy your handle! Thank you for coming forth to say such nice things. I’m glad you find these little ramblings useful!
Mark - I may take you up on that! In the meantime, I’ll keep synthesizing (great observation!) down here if you’ll do so up there.
Hell, I’ll do it regardless. And I know you will, too. Which is why I dig your sh*t.
Larry - Bah! You and words, you’re like *this*. But thank you, all the same.
Oct 30th, 2007
Not Fainthearted
Isn’t it strange how we classify as “optional” that creative activity that feeds us best? Congrats for seeing it and doing the things that feed your soul.
Oct 31st, 2007
communicatrix
NF - Strange, and yet, so common. It makes me wonder what the hell we’re teaching our younguns.
Nov 1st, 2007