Friday, February 8, 2013

Maverick with File Cards


I don’t think I’ll ever write anything longer than a blog post. I can hardly sit still long enough. Even if my seat is pinned in the chair, my mind flits out the window and soars with the hawks.

Committed to the computer, I type half of a great introductory sentence, then jump up and go to the kitchen to heat my tea, hoping the other half of that idea will be there when I get back. It never is.

I jump up to close closets and cabinets. I can’t help myself, they sort of call me. ADDs can’t screen out incoming stimuli – even from motionless cabinet doors. My ADD mind is a restless, impulsive maverick who underestimates time consumption. 

Attention Deficit is a new label for me but I’m learning how to deal with it, even to enjoy it. Finding out at this point in my life (age 60) is stunning. On one hand, affirming some of the helpful techniques I’ve stumbled upon along the way. On the other hand, too late to avoid the trail of destruction I left in my family. Repairing relationships is an ongoing focus of mercy and humility.

I choose to scratch my pesky mental itches by turning to the creative: I write. Experts on ADD remind us we are tenacious and brave. We are smart and imaginative. Writing is the perfect playground.

I’m learning to accept feelings of incompetence both ADDs and writers suffer, but I can’t afford to claim this ADD label as a liability. I need to live – and write - in the paradigm of ADD as an asset. I’m managing the hyperactive creatures within me, improving life by creating beauty from chaos.

ADD shows up in my writings.

Sometimes my writing is a mystery to others. Problem: when I write a sentence I think I’ve expressed a thought. Each word chosen for that sentence is a concept encompassing great detail, a symbol of deep meaning. However, people in my writing critique group have gently pointed out that many paragraphs could emerge from that single sentence.  On the other hand, sometimes such extreme level of detail erupts from within the author that the reader is overwhelmed and shuts down or turns away.

However, during writing critique group meetings my attention never strays. I am captivated and delve into the flow of analysis and enjoy someone else’s fiction or each line of a draft poem. Deep concentration and conversation like this is actually restful to my ADD mind. 

MANAGING THESE TRAITS to thrive as a writer.

One problem – all options seem valid. Whether that includes events in a story arc or writing tasks I’m in the middle of, my busy ADD mind rides the carousel of all the pretty horses and doesn’t naturally move forward on any single one of them.

However, creating structures helps keep me focused forward as I write. I always hang my car keys on the hook just inside the kitchen because the hook is there. A physical structure.

I’m organizing to be efficient, not pretty, just well enough to function.  A yellow 3x5” card is taped to the office wall above the light switch that says, “Stuff is noise.” Decreasing clutter in my writing area and keeping only one writing project (okay, maybe two) on the desk at a time are effective strategies against that sense of overwhelm.

A hanging file on the wall behind me has only three pockets. File folders cleanly labeled with black marker make each one neat and available. If I want to turn around and peek at another project, the distraction doesn’t last long. I know precisely where it belongs - not on top of another horizontal stack of notebooks on top of another filing cabinet.

Magazines references are stored vertically – upright in containers. If the first one or two lay down, I blink and they have multiplied like rabbits into families of magazines. I also store any magazine with a particularly inspirational article open to that page. That saves distraction time remembering if it was in Poets & Writers or Writers’ Digest.

Pens and pencils. I’ve selected five (5) of my best pens, those that flow well and fit my hand. And I lay one across the page of active writing if I do leave the room so I know where to engage when I return.

A kitchen timer is set to 40-minute intervals when I write, unless I’m speed drafting, then to 15-minute bits. The trouble with distraction is I don’t know I’ve just been distracted. I’ve left the room. I think I remember every vivid detail but don’t know what I don’t know. The timer brings me back.

Most of my great ideas don’t get accomplished. No external punishment or enticement can motivate me to finish a task uninterrupted. So many competing ‘things’ battle for attention that I fall short. When I get discouraged and feel like a failure, someone kindly reminds me to think playfully and the self-condemnation block is broken.

Moving forward. Feedback please.

It seems reasonable and attainable to aim for 600 – 700 words to deliver a clear idea. I think my next project will be an anthology of blog entries.

 

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Loss and Joy Together

My brother died yesterday. He wrestled with the pain of cancer and effects of treatment for most of four years. In a few days, we will remember his life, and I’m eager to go. Dichotomies fascinate me, and even though it’s uncomfortable to think about feeling joy at someone’s funeral, that happens to me most of the time.
I look for joy – along with the mourning.
My family celebrates a life lived in a pretty simple manner. There will be good food prepared by family and friends and stories shared.
It’s early March, and new growth around the place is pressing up through dry brown leaves of last fall. Living close to nature and her rhythms, I see this every year. So, at the same time John’s body is passed, I’ll smile at the gurgle of a newborn cousin. I’ll notice a new relationship growing toward marriage and scheduled between seasonal demands – joy.
John’s death is horribly sad, but I’m looking forward to hearing people share elements of his life that blessed theirs. At the same time we cry, we laugh at the antics of a younger stronger man. I’ll see people that were important to him and my life will be enriched. We’ll all be relieved we don’t have to see him suffer pain or agony anymore.
Death comes when it will. We suffer our losses. To grieve the loss of John’s life has to address the joy of his love. Only because his great joy in the love of his wife and grandkids is the sorrow also great. Joy and sorrow must go together. And as those little ones grow up, they’ll remind their mother of the joy remembered when Grandp’s is mentioned. When he knew his time was growing short, time spent with these little ones became more precious. In that joy, he felt loss.
Just as black keys on a keyboard enhance the music, so does loss enhance joy.
                                  *****
Here are websites of resources with which we can oppose cancer. Let's please fight.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Road Ready

“I keep my car packed.”
I’m getting to know a new friend. Her eyes opened a bit when she hears this tidbit.
“So I can run away,” I follow up.
Yes, so I can run away when I need to. It makes me smile, even now, to say “running away”.
When I was little, I kept an old wool army blanket rolled around a table knife, a spoon, and a can of pork and beans.  Didn’t have a can opener but figured I could use a rock to beat a hole big enough to poke that spoon into. With this kit and a snake stick, I could run away and stay gone a couple days.
Now that I’m pushing 60 years old, my kit is more developed and precise.  

What I pack:
·         A first-purchase sleeping bag rated to keep me warm at 20 degrees. It needs to be a brand new one, not leftover or scavenged from the closets of children now grown. I’m very cold-blooded and would feel any thermal thinning of the batting of a used and abused bag.
The Prairie Festival at the Land Institute south of Salina, KS was the last place I ran away to. I cozied up in my flannel-lined bedroll, prayed toward the stars and slept like a baby.
·         Two collapsible canvas lawn chairs. I have difficulty relaxing at home, but if I come across an impromptu concert or random parade in some tiny town on the plains, I want to be ready to sit and stay a while. This is more likely during county fair season – late summer.
I’ve been writing as I drive for years. My mind seems to free itself up about an hour out. I found a method to control my notebook and contain my supplies.
·         A 5-liter rubber-type plastic container with snap-on lid. (Yes) This container serves as a flat surface about elbow height on the seat beside me. It’s a good thing I’m right-handed. A small rectangle of non-slip shelf liner helps stabilize the paper and pen.
This container stays in the car and holds everything I need for a few days away. The contents are planned though the trip is not. The only ingredients I could add as I slip out the door predawn would be a chunk of cheese, bottle of wine, loaf of homemade bread, and a couple apples, if available.
·         Food: beef jerky, bag of nuts, two bottles of water, and a dark chocolate snicker bar (that has been in there for about three months already).
I don’t want to stop for food, or for anything except fuel. I’m running away, not going to town. These trips may not be premeditated, but they are intentional. They function to reconnect my heart with my head and my spirit with the God of the universe – one of the quantum dimensions anyway.
·         Tools: duct tape, multi-tool Leatherman, electrical pliers, large straight-slot screwdriver, pocket knife, plastic eating utensils, wine bottle opener, a couple bar towels for my lap as I drive. and toe nail clippers. Each tool holds its place in the travel bin due to prior experience.
         
·         There is usually a map of the central states in the car but I have a strong sense of magnetic north, so it stays in the seat pocket.  

When I begin to feel like a cornered coyote, tension building with no outlet, I sleep in my clothes, wake when God wakes me predawn, slip behind the wheel, and run away.
A song erupts from my heart through my throat with just a few miles under my belt. I’m able to breathe again. 
Today, just like when I was a kid, no one notices when I’ve run away. That stings a little bit but the main thing is that I’m able to breathe again and I do have that choice. I can always run away again.




Chickens & Rats

Supper was good. I don’t remember what we ate, but my belly is not hungry anymore. Mom is clearing the table. No one is talking; we don't talk.

Mom mentions, “There should have been more eggs this morning.”

Eggs are gathered mid to late morning, after the hens have picked at the scratch for a couple hours and taken turns in the nest boxes.

Eggs matter. Mom depends on eggs to help feed her six children and two hired men, so a shortage will be dealt with - immediately. I gathered them today, didn’t drop any, but I still feel heavy even though Mom does not seem to be mad at any of us. This must be critter damage, and since the raccoon population this season is limited to our two pets, and skunks are not having babies yet, that leaves the obvious – rats. Without discussion, we all know the next step.

It's fully dark outside. We equip ourselves with two wooden baseball bats and a couple digging spades and file out the door. I try to swallow the lump in my throat, clench my jaw, and join the line of siblings, somewhere near the middle so as not to be noticed.

“Let's go.” Brother Paul is younger than me by eighteen months but leads the charge – always.

“Get that baseball bat, Mike. You can wash it afterwards if it gets any blood on it. Carol, you stay on this side of the door to the little chicks’ house. Those rats will be trying to get back to their den so don't let ‘em by you. John, you start at the other end and make a lot of noise. Hit as many rats as you can and don't hit any chickens! ”

“Noise. Goodie. Make noise, I can do that.” Johnny is on board.

The boys and I silently creep to our stations; the sound of dry crunching straw under our feet. I hate this dusty dirty job. Baby sister, Kelly, is too little for this task; older sister,Teena, is too important.I go with the boys.


Paul knows when we are in place and flips the switch for the single hanging bulb.


Aaaarrrgghh!!!!”


Mike accidently smacks the dust-laden hog fence with his bat. The chickens that were perched there sleeping are now squawking, almost screaming; they’re scared of these kids who usually rock them to sleep, now armed with bats .

 The rats run up the fence posts, up the walls, and up my legs. If I don't take careful aim, I'll break a window. A chicken flies up and breaks the light bulb. Things are getting too wild; the job is called off.

We gather and count dead rats in the bucket.

Mom will be happy.
͠
Once in a while, I’ll just have to share one of these memories. They’ll resonate with some readers.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Dragons and such


Under my bowl of hot and sour soup, my placemat discloses I'm a Dragon.

"You are eccentric and your life complex. You have a very passionate nature and abundant health. Marry a Monkey or Rat late in life. Avoid the Dog."


I am eccentric. And passionate. And fairly healthy. I’m tracking with the validity of this appraisal so far. Then the text gets in my business.

Marry a Monkey or Rat? Late in life? Oh dear! I’ve screwed up!

Why doesn’t it mention the Snake? That’s what I married - a Snake, and very early in life. Why does this placemat enlighten me 35 years into this mess? It just says “Avoid the Dog.”  Nothing about Snakes! Maybe life would just be bliss if I had made better choices.

What do I do now? Ask every person I have a good conversation with if they meet the qualification?

“Were you, by chance born in 1944 or 1956? (Monkeys) Or possibly 1948 or 1960? (Rat)”

(I’m giving myself a plus or minus of ten years. And assuming a wedding at my own age of 59 would be judged “late in life.”)

“Actually, 1948! How did you guess?”

And when I meet Mr. Right Rat, (probably at a Chinese restaurant) what do I tell my kids?

“I’m now living according to the latest data from the Chinese Zodiac, and your father’s a Snake.”

Sum: I believe that when I get new information, I need to act on those facts, or at least incorporate them into my current understanding. Also, the Chinese culture offers a reliable wisdom approach.

If it comes up, I will ask birthdates. And I’ll take the answer with a grain of soy sauce.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

What are my blogs about?

My intention is that posts will be about transcendent experiences of nature and spirit and heart. Things that penetrate our being: soul and spirit.

What alters our perspective?
Driving – roadtrips?

Visions and dreams?

Oh yeah!

Other topics:
Health and wellness
Spirit
Maps and Territories
Stewardship and Sustainability
Real food
Becoming someone

Links: · Food Revolution · Natural News · Economist · Financial Times · Heifer International · The Land Institute