a creative life
INDIA | Tuesday, 19 February 2008 | Views [1487]
For about six months I've been feeling something shifting inside of me.
I can only compare the sensation to being made of sand; where every
move I make shifts a million grains into a new order that fills the
holes and packs down to take the shape of each novel form, motion and
angle into which I contort. The shifting brings confidence in its
settling. But it also brings some discomfort in its weight and slow
reluctance to continually resort itself from a form in which it was
content. Regardless, this shifting brings me no alarm; it feels
natural, timely and called (subconsciously) upon. While I feel it
scraping around my insides and clearing the space for something new,
with too many options on my table, I wonder if I will be doing the
choosing or if, eyeing the clean and ready slate, it will be one of my
choices that will snatch the opportunity and choose me. But then again,
perhaps every decision is only the "x" where time and opportunity cross
– and one (choice and chooser) could not exist without the other. In
any case, comforting is the fact that there is also an unaccredited
confidence that I am approaching a surprise conclusion. I'm not sure if
I'm making any sense, but I attempt to explain this "shifting," because
I like to call out my phases as I move through them, especially for
those mislead into thinking that I'm as solid and unwavering as my path
sometimes projects.
While the shift is still nameless, there is
a new theme that is taking shape. This week I found myself pondering my
history and recognizing that while in high school and college I pursued
what I imagined to be a perfect life (with perfect grades and perfect
partners and perfectly pretty places) I finally (and think correctly)
rejected the notion of "perfect" and replaced it with "unique." And so
I spent the next ten years singing to the theme song of, "of all my
lives, this will be my most unique" and whistling this tune I walked to
a few corners of the earth. Now while this message, of the options and
expanse and magic of a unique life, continues to be the most important
I carry and share with others, I feel myself now ready for something
new. There is an important parable in Buddhism that asks, when you
cross a river with a boat, and finally reach the other shore, do you
pick the boat up and continue to carry it with you? In this way my
"unique life" has served as my boat; and while it was essential in
transporting me to where I am, I feel it now weighing and constricting
me, from my path forward. On a new side and shore, it's time for me to
respectfully leave the paradigm, as I would a child that has come of
age, and reassume responsibility for my life, free of the constraints
that even a "free" life contains.
So I move. And while perhaps
it is not wise for me to so casually and quickly replace one word with
another, it is my nature to theme my living, as aims and goals and
intentions I have yet to resolve as unessential.
The word I have
chosen is, "creative." Can you hear the sigh? Does it not immediately
drop bars and overwhelm with relief? Does it expand horizons beyond the
straight lines of "unique"? Doesn't it give room to color in instead of
expand straight lines out? It does all these things for me.
And the word is full of challenge.
With
a left brain sharpened by a business degree, statistics, excel
spreadsheets, and finance, my right brain, while spinning quite out of
control in dreams and sometimes in type, has yet to find the outlets
through which it would like to fully breathe.
My "creative life"
was seeded in birth, fostered in childhood, neglected through school
and only started dropping hints as to its existence through the pockets
discovered in the path of a "unique life." But I'm turning those
pockets now inside out, and challenging myself, starting this week, to
the task of exercising the muscles and employing the tools of a
creative life; to drop my bars of perfectionism and contours of
exclusivity and open myself to the peaceful process of coloring my life
in; focusing on the details, character development, and the lines on
and stories behind, the hands that touch my life. It's a big theme, but
a small daily task, to stop looking forward, and instead consider the
angles. And it's a new beginning, with creative muscles that shake with
neglect, weakness and fear. But it's also an invigorating relief, to
have a new boat, and new shores, and a new journey, to color in front
of me. And I'm especially appreciative of the community of exercised
artists that, with great luck, I have subconsciously called into my
life as best friends, and of whom I will be calling upon for mentorship
on this new phase of, "my creative life."
Tags: On the Road