Hi everyone.
Here's some of the things I've done over the past couple of days, how I feel about them and how I feel now.
*A colouring-in book
I'd read the thread on this activity, and then my Mum also received one of these books from a friend for Caesarmas. I went to an art supply store to get some black card to re-black-out my bedroom windows, and I found a really nice one of these books. So I bought it as a gift to myself and some felt-tip pens and sat for a wihle colouring in and listening to some music I like.
I think it helped because it 'stilled' my mind. It gets rid of internal chatter and takes one away from thought loops of the false personality. Afterwards, I just felt more relaxed and grounded.
*Visiting friends to play games
We had a games night at a friend's house and it was a lot of fun. There were 5 of us in total - me and two couples - and these guys are friends that I really care about and enjoy being with. Also, one of them got me a book,
Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl. She'd read it herself and thought I'd like it, and I was really touched.
Whenever I'm out, be it with friends, family or at work, I do 'take the Work with me' (a nice phrase). But even though we can still be somewhere else and self-remembering, self-observing, constantly working out the best way to be externally considerate moment to moment, it's a different kind of work to just being sat in the house, reading and working on the computer. As well as the fun, and the sharing and talking and playing, just the change of scene was very beneficial for me. I feel a bit like the energy in me and in my home had become stale, somehow; home had started to become a place of 'flatness' and 'drabness'.
*Watched some episodes of
Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Since coming back to the forum, I've had so much reading and catching up to do that watching any kind of tv show or movie just hasn't been on the radar and I've had no desire to do so. I just couldn't see any reason for it and didn't want to uselessly dissociate.
Well, it turns out after watching some Buffy, and also, thinking back to when I went to see the new Star Wars film with my cousin last week and earlier in the year we went to see the Mad Max remake, that I actually don't dissociate when I watch films and suchlike. I'm constantly trying to read between the lines, profiling the characters, looking for the cosmic drama's.
The character of Buffy has always filled me with a deep appreciation of what it means to be a warrior. She doesn't have a choice in whether or not she wants to be 'The Slayer' today, or not. She tries to have her normal life, but at the same time, she has to be constantly on guard and prepared to fight a demon at any moment - just like us. Any temptation we might face, any lazy or selfish thought, any difficult person we have to interact with, anything we don't want to have to do right now, these are all demons that - as warriors - we have to be prepared to fight. So watching these episodes refilled my 'sense-of-purpose-battery' so to speak.
*Jam night
Last night I went to a bar where local musicians gather to play together every Wednesday. It was a place I used to go every week when I first moved to the town where I now live, but I hadn't been to this place for over a year. Again, it was just nice to get out and see some people I hadn't seen for a long time. I also may have picked up a new guitar student from it. Again, it was just a change of scenery and I just got to get up and play some songs in a relaxed atmosphere, which was fun.
All in all, I feel more like the me I want to be; more like the me I should be; more like the me that I was. I'm really glad this has happened because now I know a feeling to watch out for. It's hard to describe but it falls into the category of a dullness and flatness and staleness. So I'm going to recommence my usual routine and when I start to feel this way again, I'm just going to take a break from whatever it is I'm spending too much time working on, and really just 'have a change'. In English, we have a saying, "A change is as good as a rest" and I think this applies when we're thinking about down time. Down time, a break, a rest, a change, doesn't have to be mean that we need to DISSOCIATE; it doesn't mean we have to forget ourselves or our aim; it doesn't mean we have to switch of into a flatline brain pattern. That was what I was afraid of, I think: "I can't stop what I'm doing because I'm supposed to be working towards being more conscious, not more unconscious." I had made an association between changing my activities and "going back to sleep" (which I fear), and that was wrong of me. If you're a thinker and a questioner and a dot connector and you're always looking for the nuances and deeper reality behind the symbols we get with our eyes and ears, then I think whatever you're doing can be a useful activity.
bjorn said:
To much self-remembering may turn you into a ‘monk’ I think.
With that I mean, unable to enjoy anything. It’s stressful.
Well, self-remembering is a way to achieve one's aim - so if one's aim is to become a monk, then yes, it'll help with that. But if one's aim is to be able to face reality and at the same time experience an enjoyment of the challenge and experience, then done in the proper way, it should help with that too.
Buddy said:
Is there anything that you've put on a "back burner" waiting for the right time?
Learning to oil paint and getting my gradings for guitar and drums. They're things I want and need to do, respectively, but I haven't had a sense of urgency about them. But I may have to bump them up my priorities list after my experiences this week.
obyvatel said:
Besides, "taking time out", which is what TC was asking about in the first post, is not "working". It is a time for relaxation and/or social interaction.
And as always, the devil is in the details and it depends what you're like and what your aim is. As I've discovered, to my pleasant surprise, relaxation and social interaction don't have to mean dissociation and sleep. I think in my original post, I was speaking of downtime in the sense of "not working", but now I don't see them as needing to be separate. I guess it's just like 'working in a different room'.
Chu said:
I think that it's pretty normal to go through periods like that, T.C. And that it's awesome that you feel so much sense of responsibility. But, you have to have some social life, and most of all, some fun. Otherwise, you go through what you noticed. And you can also stifle any creative process. I know because it has been a hard one for me to change, and I still sometimes fall back into "must do" mode, until I'm exhausted. It's not worth it. I keep reminding myself that if I get sick, or die, then I'm going to be MUCH less useful!
It's good to know I'm not alone in this and that it's normal. It's ironic (and annoying) that in order to be more productive in the things that are priorities, we have to stop every now and again and do something seemingly unrelated. But, I guess even marathon runners have to stop and rest before they can carry on again. It seems I have been neglecting things that are important, that actually are priorities too. I'm learning other things that are important and other ways I can take care of myself, to continue to be useful to others.
Anyway, here is a post that might help you: http://scottiestech.info/2014/12/07/work-smarter-not-harder/
Even if you are not working on a problem you need to solve, it's a good philosophy to apply all around, I think.
Thanks. I'll read it.
Another thing is to make sure that you don't indulge too much into anything. But I think you already know that. Just as leaving the forum made you appreciate it more, well, one hour doing something else can make you feel a lot happier about coming back, contributing to group projects, etc.
What I've found to be helpful is to do something useful. I'm not one of those people who can be perfectly happy playing a video game, watching something for hours, etc. For me, any "hobby" has to have some kind of purpose (it CAN be annoying to be like that, but that's the way it is!). It's like I have to feel that the fun activity makes me learn something and be productive too, not just for fun. So, I sew, or do something manual that helps (cleaning, tidying up, organizing, fixing something, etc.). I watch movies with others, but for the social connection. And I spend time with people (here in this community but also with others), for the same reason, and for strategic enclosure, etc. But if it's a "me time", then it must be something useful. I feel like I've taken time off, but also accomplished something at the same time. You've got to work around what you have. Otherwise, you can get as frustrated/guilty/sad etc. if you don't do something fulfilling. (But before you think I'm a freak, I DO do things just for the sake of relaxing, once in a while! :P Rarely though... But the things I described are already relaxing in their own way.)
Yes, I can relate to that. I hate the thought of wasting time. There has to be a reason for everything I do. I recently bought a book called,
The Village Effect about how important social interaction is, in the hope that with more knowledge of a good reason, I might make more of an effort to get out more. Seems there was some timing in that, because I've only read the first chapter before putting it down and now things have come to a head a little bit. Guess my higher self tried to intervene before I started to feel 'off'.
And, if you have an inner fire that tells you what you want to do, then that time "off" is not wasted. It's just a time to recover energy, think, reflect upon things you learned, use your brain differently, etc. And when you go back to "serious stuff", it will feel different. You will have renewed your commitment to it.
Anyway, just FWIW. That's how I trick myself before I get too exhausted. One has to take care of oneself for the sake of others too.
Yes, I'm feeling much better today. I felt a bit reluctant to post about how I was feeling because my negative introject was telling me, "You should just be able to carry on - you're looking for an excuse to be lazy". I'm glad I started the thread, now.
Oh, and yes, sometimes you can work like crazy and have no fun because you are trying to control things. Because you don't feel that your inner world is under control (not to mention the real mess we have in the world, against which sometimes we may feel there is nothing we can do). Or because you are afraid of dealing with something else, and keeping busy distracts you from that. So, being aware of it helps.
I journal often as a way of processing anything I might need to deal with. Unfortunately, I'm also aware that you can't analyse the way you think with the way you think, so things may slip thorough the net. But I do try to make it a regular practice in the hope that I can deal with any of my problems. I don't think I just Do in order to avoid something else; I do because I feel I need to justify my existence and because it is now what's in me to do and it's what I want to be doing - I don't see any other reason to exist.
You can then decide whether to change your attitude and keep working but for better reasons, or even allow yourself to feel that you "control" the process (but know that that is what you are doing instead of identifying too much with the job you are performing), or go do something else, accept the things you can't control, work on the issue in question, and still learn to be ok. Or a combination, depending on the situation.
I think moving in to my own place in October has contributed to the way I've been feeling. Even living in a house-share with your own room and personal space, you have lots of interactions that break up your day/evening - conversations which might not be about anything deep or interesting, but just ones you didn't PLAN to have: short little experiences you didn't plan - whereas, when you live alone, and you're at home, every single thing you do is under your own impetus. I think there's something in this - control versus randomness; everything you experience dictated by you, as opposed to some things you experience being out of your control.
Just some ideas which may or may not apply to your situation. If you think it does, how about taking on a course of some kind, a useful hobby, a new skill you can learn either by yourself, or in a class setting in town, or something?
Thanks Chu. All good food for thought.
[edit: fixed quote]