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Author’s Note: This piece was written several days ago, but it took me almost a week to show up enough to post it. Baby steps, y’all, baby steps.

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Earlier today I sat down to write. The conditions were optimal, just the way I like it. A candle flickered in front of me. The Shins were playing in the background. Teddy was building a fort, and Jackson wasn’t home from school yet. All was quiet – well, relatively quiet – and I was hoping to make some progress before the after-school chaos began.

I typed a sentence. Deleted it. Tried another one. Deleted that one too. I stared at the computer screen for a while. Typed a few words. Deleted them.

This type-delete-stare-at-the-screen-type-delete rhythm has been my routine the past few weeks, much to my disappointment and frustration. After a month of less-than-ideal conditions – travel plans, holiday chores, parties, and winter break – I was ready and eager to get my head back in the game. I had lofty goals of furiously typing away or scribbling in my notepad each night. And the conditions have been optimal for getting back into a regular routine too. With the boys back in school (a couple of unexpected school cancellations aside), I have extra time. I’ve been jotting down ideas for the past few weeks so potential material is there. I’ve been reading William Zinsser’s On Writing Well and re-reading Anne Lamott for inspiration. I even found some new playlists and bought new candles.

But, for some, reason, the words have not been flowing as I had hoped. When they do come, they feel clunky and awkward, disconnected and weak. And I, in turn, feel insecure and scared.

Perhaps my writing muscles have atrophied a bit and I just need to write those crappy first drafts, as the experts recommend. Maybe I’m a little insecure because the past few months have been so focused on bringing Open Boxes into the world and I just need to move on to what-comes-next. Or maybe I’m just scared that there might not be a what-comes-next and I’m searching for validation.

Whatever the reason, something tells me that I might not alone. I know that other writers go through these periods of uncertainty, stretches where they have to force themselves to sit down, and glue their butt to the chair, until they have tapped out a few sentences. And something tells me that we all have times when we are unsure and scared about what we’re doing and where we’re going, whether it has to do with our career, a friendship, parenting, a relationship, or what-have-you.

In any event, I’ve grown a bit tired of trying to figure out the why of it all and I just want to move on to the how. And though the answer seems relatively simple, it certainly isn’t easy: Show up and do something. Even if it’s awkward and painful and clumsy, just show up and do SOMETHING.

I suppose that’s what I’m trying to do here. Show up and do something. Write something. Even if it’s hard and clumsy and awkward and so very less-than-ideal. Because, really, what in life with any significance isn’t hard and clumsy at times? What in life with real purpose and meaning isn’t awkward and less-than-ideal at times?

A few weeks ago, an old friend called seemingly out of the blue. We hadn’t talked in years, though we kept in touch here and there on Facebook and through emails and with Christmas cards. As I listened to her message on my voicemail, bravely and vulnerably reaching out, I started to cry. I missed her, certainly, but so much time had passed since we had last connected that I was also a little scared about calling her back. Was she okay? Would the conversation be awkward? What would we talk about? Nonetheless, I called her back a few minutes later and, yes, there were a few minutes of awkward small talk. But then she showed up – I mean really showed up – and something cracked open in the best possible way. We talked about hard things and good things and scary things and way-back-when things.

Nothing about the conversation was ideal – we had a bad cell phone connection, my dogs were barking, and the kids were making lots of noise in the background – but somehow the connection felt bigger than a telephone conversation; it felt transformative and almost other-worldly. Maybe that’s what happens when we show up? Love and light squeeze their way into the broken-open cracks.

Earlier today the conditions for writing were ideal – time, lighting, ambience, music was all perfect – but it just didn’t work for me. And now? The conditions are, let’s just say, so very less-than-ideal. The boys are bouncing off a cushion pile they have assembled in the family room. They call me over every few minutes to break up fights, wipe tears, and admire the new fort they are building. And yet I’m showing up and doing something, and somehow it feels right.

And maybe that is what being brave is about – showing up even though it feels clunky and awkward and so very less-than-perfect. And maybe that is what faith is about – pressing on and doing something even if we’re not sure what we’re doing or where we’re going. Maybe that is what grit and grace are all about too – writing crappy first drafts in less-than-optimal conditions.

Maybe the conditions and time don’t matter as much as I thought. Maybe it is the spirit and the heart, the showing up and doing something, that matter so much more.

 

Author

8 Comments

  1. Excellent post! It amazes me how parallel our lives are sometimes. I just wrote a post earlier today (that I plan to post tomorrow) about so many of these same things. Of course yours is written so much more eloquently. But thanks for yet another fantastic post!

    • Christie

      Thanks, Angie! I can’t wait to read your post.

  2. The muse sometimes frustrates us, but I am so glad that you pushed forward. Your post reminded me of Anne Lamott’s words: “I asked my associate how writers write. He said you put words on paper. Then what? Then write write write. What if its bad? Write it better.”

    • Christie

      Thanks for sharing those words, Rudri. It’s hard sometimes because we live in such a feedback-driven world and the writer’s life is so solitary at times. And social media makes it hard to be heard through all the noise. So thanks for sharing your thoughts.

  3. It’s interesting that you comment on writing conditions – ideal vs not. I often have more trouble writing in ideal conditions; it’s almost as if the words are waiting until they are not the sole focus, and then they come out. Showing up to write – that’s the least we can do for ourselves.

    • Christie

      Same here. The more time crunched I am, the more chaos going on around me, the more it seems I am able to focus. That said, I still need my candle to get me going. 🙂

  4. The need to be perfect has frozen me many a time. Sometimes it’s been in the form of writers’ block: not knowing how to say something just right keeps me from writing anything at all Crappy first drafts are difficult for me; crappy second drafts doubly so. For me, this thread runs through the rest of my life as well. For example, your comment about ideal conditions struck home for me because I realized that that’s a major reason why I haven’t moved forward in my plans to adopting a spiritual practice. Not only do I not know how to do it perfectly, I can’t guarantee perfect conditions every day (or even on any given day) and so I opt to not do it all, all under the guise of just needing a bit more time to work it out. After all, “everyone” says these things should be done regularly, preferably at the same time every day. Maybe I should take heart at your last post that said prayer can’t be done wrong. Thanks for your insight.

    • Christie

      I can relate to so much of what you say, Martin. I get sucked into the “should’s” of certain things too – especially the idea that I “should” write every day – but then I try to remind myself that, as they say (was it Volaire?), the perfect is the enemy of the good. My motto: “Good enough!” And there are certain things – like prayer – that you just can’t do wrong.

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