1.
I just wrote a whole draft of “quick takes” on how
the TV show “Person of Interest” has got me thinking about our relationship
with God, but then I realized that it was much too long to be “quick.” Story of
my (wordy) writing life. Since I’ve now upgraded it to a full post, I need to
edit it more and flesh it out.
2.
Speaking of writing life, the writing workshop I
attended last week changed my focus. I’ve been thinking of writing as that
thing I do for myself when everything else is done. But everything else is never
done. And I have come to think of it as (1) not only for myself, (2) a gift and a responsibility from God, and (3) not
a hobby or a skill, but as necessary to my well-being as food and drink. Something
clicked, quietly and without drama. I don’t know where God is leading me in
this, but he has re-oriented me, somehow. It’s early days yet, but I hope not
to fall back into the overthinking and paralysis that’s marked my attitude
toward writing for a long time.
3.
I gave up Facebook for Lent. I know—sooo overdone
and trite, the giving up and then the talking about giving it up, and the new! precious!
insights! into being present instead of looking at a screen all the time, and
the “making a long face, so men might know that you’re fasting, and lo, you
have received your reward.” And yet, I was pretty well addicted and used FB as
a retreat and an escape. So I gave it up. We’re, what, nearly halfway through
Lent? I still miss it, more than I missed chocolate when I gave that up for
Lent a couple of years ago. And I don’t have any new insights from my suddenly less-connected
life other than realizing that my self-medication for mental stress changed
from fiction to Facebook at some point.
4.
Well, no insights other than this: my writing
Facebook statuses and comments relieved some of the internal writing “pressure”
that I feel. Hence the precipitous drop
in blog posts when I became enamored with FB.
5.
I really, really need to complain about the weather.
Again with the triteness. But people, it is now officially spring. Forecasters
say sunny and upper 60s tomorrow, and possible SNOW on Tuesday. It’s…just…I can’t
even…sigh.
6.
Part of the frustration now is that my
rheumatologist said I could lower my dose of immunosuppressant once the temperature was consistently over
60 degrees. Apparently cold weather is harder on autoimmune diseases (and
Reynaud’s syndrome is a common companion to AI disease, although I don’t have
it at this point), so she doesn’t want to try a lower dose until it gets warm.
I am eager to lower the dose, since I basically lose one day a week in brain
fog, extreme fatigue, and often headache. (One day lost but seven days without
pain or rash and six days without [much] fatigue, so it’s a tradeoff I’m
willing to make.) C’mon spring!
7.
The band Gungor introduced me to Amena Brown, a
Christian spoken-word artist who was on their live album. And then she turned
up on a blog I read, doing this amazing reading/spoken-word poem with Ann
Voskamp, whose prose writing is half poetry anyway. It's worth your time. And now I want to be a spoken-word poet when I grow up. I embedded the video below, but Blogger seems to think that all videos come from YouTube, so I had to download it to my computer and then upload it here, and it looks a bit blurry to me. If you want to go to the source and watch a full-screen version that's a bit clearer, here's the link: http://vimeo.com/89473829
For more Quick Takes, visit Conversion Diary.
3 comments:
Thanks for the interesting read.....a nice break from my hideous computer work!374
Escaping into fiction...now that sounds familiar. Have a lovely weekend!
It's so funny to me how I continue to learn from you. God keeps teaching me things through you. Thank you for these gifts.
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