Any fellow over-thinkers out there? It's January 2 and I am still noodling with my New Year resolutions, or plan or projects. Can't even decide on what it will be.
What I want to do is to launch a new project: which I did yesterday after recognizing what was stopping me was my miraculous and overactive mind.
I've set out to take a photo daily of White Rock Lake: a layering of a new series upon series I began in July of 2011. This time I will stand in the same place and I will study a view through the seasons: light, color, textures of the water and the shedding and growth of flora. I found the place to stand last night: a familiar dock: not the same dock as last year, and one I can rely on: the familiar nearby.
I worked on how I will stand to make sure the frame is consistent. Can't do this project, I thought: I don't have a tripod.
I wondered what will happen if I leave town. Can't do this project: I can't expect to be here 365 days...even in a pandemic.
I considered my own boredom and the boredom of others Can't do this project: Won't we all tire of the same view?
And don't I really need an IPhone 12 before I start this project?
OR. Even though it was already 5:30 and late enough I just needed to start it. I don't have all the answers but I do know what I am committed to:
I am committed to trying.
I am committed to being in practice. My two new practices are "Walk" and "Write" daily. This supports both-as there I was and here I am.
I am committed to a final result: in an exhibition or a book: a new way of seeing nature change slowly over time. This is mindfulness.
And I am committed to hard things. It may be raining. It may be too cold, or too dark. And I won't want to. But it will be this word, this existence for trying that will put me there.
I could have made it harder: to be at the dock at a specific time. I decided to meet myself in the middle of intention and effort: the practice is to capture the same view each day. This is enough. Knowing what is enough is graceful, gentle and a way of being inside of a commitment with integrity, challenge and self-care.
Perhaps you missed the start of your New Year Intention: still thinking about it, too? Wondering why, how long and for what purpose? Is a pen or computer nearby?
Start with this prompt, an excerpt from the poem "The Journey" by Mary Oliver:
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Let the over-thinker be still for a moment and see how you can create possibility beyond the practical. How do you want to be in your beginning this year?
And Happy New Year!
Very well narrated !! Thank you for thoughtful and beautiful write up !
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