Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Inspiration

I was cleaning up old emails out of my inbox when I discovered this one, the final NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) encouragement for 2008. Re-reading this email today was providence, I am sure, because I need that motivation to get back into writing mode - haven't written anything for 2 weeks now (other than blogs). Next time I write a blog (which will be about parenting frustrations, foolish New Years resolutions, and puppies), I WILL have writing progress to report!

From NaNoWriMo:

Jobs. Having a job is one of the greatest, trickiest things you can do as an adult. Employment brings perks like challenges and growth and (sometimes) money. But the longer you work at a job, the easier it is to confuse what you are doing with what you can do.
This is true whether you're a dental hygienist, a stay-at-home parent, or Sirkka-Liisa Anttila, the Forestry Minister of Finland. Because careers tend to be all about specialization. Human beings, on the other hand, contain multitudes. Each of us has a wealth of talents spread broadly over domains both marketable and deliciously impractical. The tricky part is that we tend to develop the former at the expense of the latter. Passions become hobbies. Hobbies become something we swear we'll get back to when we have more time. Or when the kids are grown. Or when the stock market recovers.
Which means we leave unexplored many of those paths that ultimately make us feel most alive—the moments of creating, building, playing, and doing that lead to extraordinary and unexpected things.
Like writing a book.
Or, more loosely, postponing the must-dos of the real world to spend 30 days exploring an attractive, improbable dream.
Giving ourselves that time is so important. Because the world can wait. It's what the world does best, in fact. It was hanging out for 4.5 billion years before we arrived, and it'll be waiting around for another few billion after we're gone.
Our dreams, however, have much shorter shelf-lives.
If there's one thing I've learned from running NaNoWriMo, it's this: Whatever you think you are, you are more than that. You possess a fearsome array of skills and abilities, and the most satisfying of these may be completely unknown to you now. Your curiosity is a dependable guide; follow it. Put yourself in unfamiliar places. Kindle passions. Savor the raw joy of making things, and then remake the best of those things until they take someone's breath away. Wrestle bears.
Actually, skip the bear-wrestling.
But do keep trying big things, okay? Sometimes we can wait so long for a clear sign that it's time to begin, that the opportunity sails right past us.
Life is so short. Adventures beckon. Let's get packed and head out on a new one today.
I think it's time.
ChrisNaNoWriMo

1 comment:

  1. Hey Margo, due to my inability to say no I have had to postpone my writing project. I have taken one extra course at seminary and was doing drywall, which has consumed all my time for writing. I'm probably not going to post the entire paper on pray, but I would willingly send you what I have written once I get to that point. I have aimed writing, but I really stink at it so your reading my stuff and giving advice might be great help.
    BJ

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