Here's a blog post direct from the dome. I mean, most of my posts are dome-based, but today I really just thought I'd sit down and type without a plan. Keeps me on my toes, and also is a nice way to be very direct and personal, which I always think of as the true essence of the blog. Y'know, lately I've been doing a lot of writing about the tasty media I've been slurping down, but right now I'm just here to present my own noodling consciousness. It's just gone noon as I write this, and it's time to commune with my blog.
I have a lot of routine changes to contend with in my life - I move around quite a lot to different places and different family members, and so the turmoil of that shifting has to be quieted. Sometimes it's just tough to adjust to a new place, or to someone else's way of doing things, and I have to carve out my own flexible structure and, when necessary, white knuckle it through jet lag.
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| Me, in a hotel room. |
I think I've gotten pretty good at scheduling. Most of the people I talk to about the concept of being a freelancer in full control of the management of every second of your life express a kind of horror at the idea. I couldn't do that, they usually say. I would just sit on my ass all day. I would rot. Me, though - legend that I am - I have no problem committing to a self-imposed workday, and I think the bliss of knowing I have complete and total control over my own time and can take a delicious and soothing tea break at any moment keeps me diligent.
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| Bad painting I made of a sculpture I saw in a hotel room. |
I mean, I have my bad days. I slip into a too-relaxed state sometimes, as is unavoidable. The human spirit craves pleasure. Some days you just need to watch an entire season of thoughtless or nostalgic TV and be done with it. And I think those breaks are nectar for the mind, we need them. Just chilling. But I have gotten to the point where my methods for managing my time are bolstered by the sheer pleasure of meeting my goals.
It reminds me, somehow, of the brief period when I worked in an office. I have such fond memories of that. Logging onto the company system, perusing the database, drafting a press release. I was always meant to be on the computer.
I use a running checklist of the basic tasks I have to do, and I try to make most of them a daily habit that I can check off. Here's the checklist as it stands:
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| About to tick off "Write a blog post". |
You'll notice that some of these are fun things. Most of them, in fact. But those fun things are sort of like breakfast to me. Something satisfying and nutritious to get me started. I like to think of the things I do for enjoyment as jobs, in a way. It's not just my time off to relax, but it's part of my job to take in these different cultural things and think about them. It's all part of the machine! My creative work requires movie pellets, or whatever. I need to gets gems in this mobile game. It's my task. It fuels me.
A list for drawing ideas, and a miscellaneous list.
I also keep a lot of lists and notes. All the time, about everything. It makes it easier to think, and then I can go back to these and remember tiny slivers of ideas. And I like to keep timed goals for certain tasks, which I also track with customised timers.
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| The red dots disappear when I complete the associated time goal. |
I never reach all of these goals in a single day, but it's a nice way to track my activity, and works as an extended checklist. It simply makes me feel accomplished. I am like Mario getting a new coin.
In the last week of January I spent at least six beautiful hours writing (although I'm not very consistent on using this particular timer because I flip-flop a bit on what counts as writing).
All this to say that I kind of consider my blog a weird inbetween thing. It's more solidly in the fun zone, not the work zone, but it's certainly practice for work. I'm doing the same thing as my work, but in a looser, more casual way where it essentially doesn't matter at all what I say or do. It's free expression with no real consideration for an audience or for the merit or appeal of what I'm writing or showing. It's my messy sketchbook. And so, this is the first thing I'm doing today (after breakfast and watching an episode of The Pitt). Saying almost nothing. But it feels so right.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to go watch a movie. It's important.
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Apps I use, in order of appearance:























































