Life in progress

I’m Not Procrastinating, I’m Keeping My Mind Gently ‘Round the Subject

29 Comments

“…keep your mind gently ’round the subject you’re pondering.”  ~ John Cleese.

This quote is profound, in my opinion, because it’s something I can wholeheartedly relate to. I spent more time playing Candy Crush on Facebook while I was writing my last NaNoWriMo project than perhaps I spent writing. I stopped to play every time I ran out of words, and each time I came to a wall in my story. The real beauty of Candy Crush is that, once I ran out of lives, I had to wait up to thirty minutes before I could play again. I used this forced break in the game to make myself go back to my story.  Yet I couldn’t decide why exactly I needed the game. Mr. Cleese, in the video I posted yesterday, explains it.

He says, (and I paraphrase) that when you ponder a problem, allowing your mind to “rest[ing] against the subject, in a friendly but persistent manner,” your sub-conscious will reward you with a creative solution.

If you listen to music when you write; if you find yourself wandering to the fridge, or doing housework – anything that you consider procrastinating, is this not what you’re doing? How many times have you been performing some mundane task when the perfect solution came to you from out of the blue? It’s that “aha” moment which Oprah went on about, way back when, and what it is, is creativity hard at work when you least expect it.

The video I posted yesterday here: https://lindaghill.wordpress.com/2014/03/05/creativity/ is thirty-six minutes that you won’t regret taking the time to watch, whether you’re a writer of fiction, poetry or blogs. If you can’t watch it right away, I strongly suggest you bookmark it.

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Author: Linda G. Hill

There's a writer in here, clawing her way out.

29 thoughts on “I’m Not Procrastinating, I’m Keeping My Mind Gently ‘Round the Subject

  1. Pingback: Writing, But Not Writing | lindaghill

  2. suzjones's avatar

    Most of my ‘aha’ moments come either when I’m meditating or in the shower. Interesting isn’t it?

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  3. Angie Mc's avatar

    Love it! Linda, I’m fascinated by the topic of time management (energy & attention) management and where it dovetails with creativity and purpose. Thanks so much for this post, the quote, and I look forward to watching the video. Oh, I wrote about procrastination here http://familyanswersfast.wordpress.com/tag/procrastination/ and yes, I finally got my business cards made 🙂

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  4. haridasgowra's avatar

    An excellent post……true…….

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  5. IreneDesign2011's avatar

    A great post Linda. We need to find ourselves sometimes, before we are ready to continue a project.
    Irene

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  6. Sara's avatar

    I will come back to it tomorrow, when I finally have a day of writing, after almost a week of snow days, that I’ll absolutely need to procrastinate during.

    I am making my way slowly through your Boy Series. It’s wonderful.

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  7. StarlitReveries's avatar

    Candy Crush Crack – It gets you through the day. It always baffles me how people can sit still for hours and work on one thing. I’m typically productive after distractions. Go figure!

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  8. Susan Irene Fox's avatar

    Yes, breaks! Although ADD usually does that for me even when I don’t want to. Watching the activities at the park across the street will do it for me. That and watching an episode of Dexter on Netflix. 😉

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  9. joey's avatar

    It’s so true. And it works for ALL brain stuff.

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  10. Carol Balawyder's avatar

    I truly believe in resting your mind against the subject. When I am stuck I always know that my subconscious will find a solution. And it always does. It’s just a matter of trust and being patient.
    Thanks for this post:)

    Here’s a technical question: How did you get the font size on these comments?

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    • Linda G. Hill's avatar

      It’s all about being patient. 🙂

      The font size is great, isn’t it? Unfortunately it’s not something you can change unless you’ve paid for your WP site. It’s in the CSS settings. I had support help me with it because, to begin with, they were so tiny that I needed a magnifying glass to see them.

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  11. Paul Davis's avatar

    Crap. I meant to watch that. Will have to do that. I do know what you mean. I find it far more often in video games, or at least more obvious, where I struggle for a long time, come back to it a week later, and I just cut through it as if it were nothing. Obviously, if that’s the response, your mind was working on it the entire time.

    Meanwhile, gentle is so boring. Sometimes firm and rough can be fun.

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