The Authority Within

The Authority Within

I might … just might… do the dishes now…

Oh my goodness, I’m getting up. I’m walking over to the dishes. I’m doing it!

But suddenly a voice calls from the other room,

“Hey, you haven’t done the dishes in a while. When are you going to do them already?”

Ugh, I don’t feel like it anymore.

What just happened?

Our hero, already struggling with a want of motivation, whim, or the muse, finally had the winds tickling the sails. But when someone else told them to do very same thing they were about to do, suddenly the desire was gone.

Many of us struggle with being told what to do.

Some blame “dopamine” … there’s not enough, it’s out of balance, it isn’t interesting or urgent enough, etc. Some make a moral accusation of laziness and the like.

However, if we approached from a perspective of ourselves as growing human beings, we might recognize an early template at work.

When our environments tell us what to do in out-of-tune manner, we reject it. “Clean your room!” when our minds are elsewhere, when any process of transition is ignored rather than guided, doesn’t work and creates problems.

The lack of empathy may not have been malicious. It was simply a disengaged approach to a mind that wanders, a mind fueled by and reveling in play, creativity, and discovery.

But when it happens over and over, we absorb a message that our natural mental rhythms are somehow “wrong” contrasting with the self that clearly exists, regardless of how wrong we accuse it of being.

And so, we rebel.

Unfortunately we may internalize the rebellion as well, forming a reflex, an unconscious ready path of rejection.

We rebel against ourselves.

How often have you written “Write report” or something similar on a task list only to see it later and say, “Not now”?

Later continues to be later as later always does, and the task languishes until it sinks below the surface or a deadline threatens from the horizon.

We saw our Past Self as an un-empathic authority to reject.

When we see the task “do dishes” and the like, our emotions swell, reflecting the relationships we’ve internalized.

Without a simultaneous honor of past self, care for future self, and respect for present self, we channel and perpetuate our injuries. Our tasks, lists, and shiny new apps only become their medium.

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

The Experience of Depression

  There's a very good discussion about the experience of depression going on. Depression is a powerful thing. Some of the comments there do it considerable justice. It is bleak; it effects a person's view of the self and world. There is a standardized definition...

read more

Work, Play, and Happy Monday

The concepts of work and play are ones that I've touched on before and can definitely talk about more. The short of it is the best work is that infused with play. The idea that they are somehow mutually incompatible is a fallacy. In some ways, I define success as the...

read more

Whistling

  Whistling ...   just whistling, ...   ... not much else.     Why not give it a try?  

read more

A Problem with Microtransactions in Gaming

    With the exception of performing in Second Life, I've faded from the massively multiplayer worlds, but I do still keep some tabs on the news. Seeing this article on Massively had me wondering what it is about so called "microtransactions" that have some...

read more
Skip to content