There's got to be a word for this
Well, the last time I wrote -- some time ago I'm sorry to admit, I used a number of words to describe my current state. Most of them had to do with the seeming effects of summer weather, which by the way have only become more pronounced the past few days. It's really hot -- record breaking, in fact -- and dry.
In this languid state I'm still enjoying reading. Sleep is less predictable, staying up to read having become something of a trend. And, did I mention the heat?
I've finished Assembling California and am now being charmed by John Muir's My First Summer in the Sierra. I didn't think it could get much better, the first two assigned books having been such good reading. My expectations have been exceeded marvelously. Long descriptions of the terrain, birds, animals, plants, trees sparkle with Muir's tremulous joy. My dear Tal continues to bear up well in face of my reading passages aloud to him. This morning we laughed our way through Muir's long description of trying to get sheep to ford Yosemite Creek. Muir's opinion of sheep descends with every turn of the page.
But, back to the title of today's post. I have every intention of writing every day with an occasional lapse. The reality is quite another thing. What's occasional is the writing! Is the word I'm looking for 'sporadic' -- meaning infrequent, coming in random bursts? How about 'episodic'? That one carries with it a hint of something akin to passion, perhaps. Ah well, whichever. Such is the tenor of these days. A little fractured. Fractured by what?
There, I think, is the answer. And, an out if I choose to take it. As careful as I am with the schedule, I don't actually have much control. In order to do the work I've been given to do I have to be available and that availability brings with it interruption and distraction. Then, there is the fact of many interests, photography to piano to yard work. My being as focused on a blog, for example, as John Muir was on keeping a journal during the summer of 1869, while not an impossibility, would cost me, certainly one or more of those interests, probably many of the relationships I enjoy, most likely my job. Pretty pricey.
Sporadic may be the best I can be, at least in this venue. I know the pay off writing can provide: honing of clarity, observing emerging themes. I also know the moment I begin gritting my teeth and "making" myself write I will turn the whole process into a chore. That would destroy the haven writing can be, and is. Given that most of the things with which I fill my days already have the feel of chore, I think I'll give the writing an much protection as I can.
So, until next time, I remain, happily, even episodically sporadic!
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