Today’s bit of process and progress

bit_process

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The Boring Bits

In every process there are some parts that are more exciting and there are some parts that are more boring. That’s just the facts and no way around it.

So today I satisfied myself that my idea was possible to reach with what I had on the design wall. There were some boring bits in there, even if it was the process of putting a whole lot of little squares on the wall. I’m not sure what the last step will actually be like but I’ll have some time in between to do some test runs on that.

That means tonight starts one of the certifiably boring parts of this gig, to take the little squares off the wall and sticking a pin through the stack through each column’s stack. Each pin has a little square of paper with a number. You know, just in case of disaster.

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Early Day 18 of NaHaiWriMo

More snow drifting down. I shoveled out my mailbox after finding the mail truck had tried pushing through the drift and had had to back up out of it (after delivering yet another dover catalogue.) I see the southern side roof avalanched yesterday sometime.

This morning when I looked out the small hillside across the road was full of flickers of red. And then, a real red: a cardinal. All the rest, and there were many, were robins, a whole hillside of robins.

the snowy hillside
every branch is robin-filled
winter confusion.

the snow is gentle.
a hillside full of robins
outshone by cardinals.

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Reads and Analogies

I’m very slowly reading this book: The Places That Scare You, A Guide to Fearlessness in Difficult Times by Pema Chödrön. It’s one of those books where if I were the sort who highlighted important ideas, every page would be one sheet of color… so, slow going to say the least.

I’m quoting this paragraph from about a third of the way into the book because of the last sentence but I thought it felt better with the lead in.

It might feel like stretching into make-believe to say, “May this person who is driving me crazy enjoy happiness and be free of suffering.” Probably what we genuinely feel is anger. This practice is like a workout that stretches the heart beyond its current capabilities. We can expect to encounter resistance. We discover that we have our limits: we can stay open to some people, but we remain closed to others. We see both our clarity and our confusion. We are learning firsthand what everyone who has ever set out on this path has learned: we are all a paradoxical bundle of rich potential that consists of both neurosis and wisdom.

So I sat there and thought about this for awhile. I’ve long ago given up on the title of the book; sounds so self-help-ish and it’s not that at all. I re-read the last sentence again and go on:

Aspiration practice is different from making affirmations. Affirmations are like telling yourself that you are compassionate and brave in order to hide the fact that secretly you feel like a loser. In practicing the four limitless qualities, we aren’t trying to convince ourselves of anything, nor are we trying to hide our true feelings. We are expressing our willingness to open our hearts and move closer to our fears. Aspiration practice helps us to do this in increasingly difficult relationships.

She goes on to say that by “doing it anyway”, we are practicing the qualities in the face of our own shortcomings and recognizing and examining those “useless habits” while doing so. We can wish someone well even while being aware that we aren’t feeling good about them. By doing so in the face of that acknowledgement we practice with resolve and increase our ability to be loving and compassionate to everyone.

I have to admit to a moment of analogy. I sat back after reading these few paragraphs a few times. The lightbulb flickered dimly. That whole aspiration thing: just do it despite the chatter in your head. Look, applique is the way to go for this project and even though it’s never been my prime tool or my favorite, I’m just going to do it. It’s not any harder than anything else in reality and I don’t have to go on to make princess feather quilts or Baltimore albums, I just need to think about how it is good on its own and is just the right thing for this and I can feel good about it. I can just do it and keep doing it even while my mind is reminding me that it’s not my thing.

That made me laugh and I figured I better re-read those pages a few more times!

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Hail to the Chiefs, NaHaiWriMo

it is a monday
working on a holiday
defeats the purpose

holidays changed from
observing, celebrating,
to buying new stuff.

this presidents day
consider what made them great
and seek to be that.

Who knew, but there is a long-standing tradition in the US Senate to read Washington’s Farewell Address near his birthday (which is on February 22nd, not on the third Monday of February, just to clarify). This began just prior to the Civil War at the behest of citizens. I like traditions like this but I would hope they actually listen to the words of concern from the first president for the new nation and her citizens and vow to serve in the same spirit.

According to Wikipedia, the House of Representatives discontinued the practice in 1984. I think that about sums up what I think about the whole Congress thing.

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