
The Pain of Potential
I could do this! I can do that! But, I need to this! But, but… I really want to do that!
One of the powers and frustrations of a wandering mind is the number of things that we can do at any one time.
What’s even more frustrating is fully knowing that if we committed to one direction or another, we could very likely do it well. But, in focusing on one path over another, we can easily feel many others closing off.
What if I’m making a mistake? What if one of the other paths is better?
All the while, our thoughts continue to pour in in parallel, while we can only act in sequence. There are so many options and only one next action.
This might seem obvious, and perhaps it is. But it is also far too easily glossed over playing out in several problematic ways.
Maybe we write a zillion tasks thinking we’d get to them all, only to find ourselves crushed in a debt of intentions.
Or maybe we run from one thing to the next trying to do it all without ever actualizing any path, even blaming ourselves:
“I just can’t focus!”
Or maybe we may fall into an uncontrolled deep dive with one thing as other important matters get lost in a chaotic wake.
Either way misses acknowledging The Pain of Potential.
This might sound like a terrible downside, a plight of the human condition.
Certainly there is loss. We can mourn that which we cannot do. Doing so does tend to reduce scatter.
But we can do so much more and even enliven ourselves by paying attention to the pain of potential.
Because it is in that engagement, that focus on our options, where we might find, not multi-tasking, but a mutual support between the rhythms we weave throughout our days.
How I write, improves how I play the piano. How I play the piano, improves how I guide therapy. How I engage others, improves how I can connect with my family. How I learn from a game, improves how I teach, …
“The impeded stream is the one that sings” [^1]
Whatever system you build needs to harness your multiple potentials and guide them in through the limits of your actions. Preferably it does so weaving together the meaningful paths of growth in common between them.
– Kourosh
PS – In the [Waves of Focus course, we build a personal Guide to harness both structure and spontaneity in guiding the multiple potentials into and through your unique days.
[^1]: https://grateful.org/resource/our-real-work-poem-wendell-berry/
Join the Weekly Wind Down Newsletter
Get a weekly letter about getting to play and meaningful work. Start getting where you want to be with calm focus. You’ll receive free samples of:
- Creating Flow with OmniFocus
- Taking Smart Notes with DEVONthink
- Workflow Mastery
- PDF on beating deadlines with ease using the Touching the Keys Technique
Recent Posts
DJ Shadow – Giving Up the Ghost
I've been really entertained by DJ Shadow lately ...
The Fear of Losing Control to our Tools
An attempt to understand the role of tools in our environments.
The Fear of Losing Control to our Tools
An attempt to understand the role of tools in our environments
New post at UsingOmniFocus.com: Reflections on OmniFocus 2, The Setup, and The Future
Reflections on OmniFocus 2, The Setup, and The Future
Thoughts on the Omni Group’s presentation of OmniFocus 2, interacting with the presenters, and thoughts for Creating Flow with OmniFocus 2.
Looking Forward to Macworld
… heading out soon …
iPads and music
I'm really impressed by the kinds of sounds that can come out of an ipad: Software in general as a means for creating sound is still something I'm trying to wrap my head around. I've been making a...
I’ll be at Macworld 2013!
I am absolutely ecstatic to be attending the Omni Group’s panel discussion for OmniFocus at Macworld in San Francisco on Thursday January 31st, 2013. The event will include the following speakers: Sven Fechner: Author of a plethora of OmniFocus posts with an upcoming...
OmniFocus at Macworld 2013
I am absolutely ecstatic to be attending the Omni Group’s panel discussion for OmniFocus at Macworld in San Francisco on Thursday January 31st, 2013. The event will include the following speakers: Sven Fechner: Author of a plethora of OmniFocus posts with an upcoming...