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Forgetting the Most Important Part

Forgetting the Most Important Part

So, what do you do for a living?

or

What do you work on?

Either appears to be a simple question. But if you really wanted to give the essence of what you do, beyond some simple label, I imagine you run into problems.

But try respond in a sentence or two and what happens?

I imagine you start, but then fumble. Maybe you think “it’s boring” and are left speechless. Maybe you find it interesting, but then you struggle to find the words of what makes it exciting.

The deeper we go into any field of knowledge, whether in our jobs, hobbies, or relationships, our words to describe it seem to grow distant. Something about its essence works its way into us, somehow shedding words along the way.

Sometimes we go so deep as to lose its recognition entirely, a fish clueless that they swim in water. (Some call it “expert blindness”, but I like the fish image.)

I ran into this problem myself while designing my Guide for the Wandering Mind. In fact, even after recording the lesson twice, readying myself for a third and hopefully final run, I had no idea that I had completely missed the most important part.

The module is about the being phase of a visit to work. Unsurprisingly, it’s about a time where we simply be, whether in flow, scatter, or anywhere in between.

What’s more simultaneously simple and complex than being?

There are currently four sections to the module:

  1. Using pen and paper to help us stay on track
  2. Recognizing a role for daydreams
  3. Engaging the emotions of “hard work”
  4. Finding stability through questions

Each section goes into detail about various practices, techniques, and exercises one could use to not only stay on track, but to dive deep in work and do it well.

I thought I had it covered. But it wasn’t until I was in conversation with one of my clients that I realized the most important part:

Simply being with the work

It may well sound like the softest, hokiest nonsense, but I assure you it is not.

Strong emotions can easily lead us into scatter. At times the nebulous winds and water, the cloudy sense of confusion, each have us finding anything and everything to do except the thing we thought to focus on.

It’s only when we gently engage, allowing ourselves the time to be with feeling that comes from our focus, be that in work or in therapy, that we start learning the conditions and hopefully how to sail them.

How is it that I missed this? It’s the centerpiece! Yet, here we are.

PS Consider for a moment, What do you do? What is its essence? Can you say that in a sentence or two?

Why not get out pen and paper and see what comes to mind? Give it time. Set it aside and come back. Thoughts, after all, take time to form from emotion and its emanations of memories, motions, and the like. The prompts of life, the day to day, and the depths of deliberate focus may all weave their way onto paper and maybe even surprise you.

 

What is Productivity?

Productivity is many things. For some, it is about doing a lot in a little time.
But, truly, productivity is so much more. It is about:

  • Setting yourself up for success.
  • Being focused where you want to be.
  • Doing things that you find meaningful.
  • Being creative, sometimes even in harsh environments.
  • Forging your own paths.
  • Finding your voice and delivering it well.
  • Knowing and actively deciding on your obligations.
  • Knowing where and how to say “no”.
  • Avoiding procrastination.

Too often, many of us fall into just going along with and fighting whatever the world throws at us. “Go with the flow!”, we say. Meanwhile, we might think, “I’d like to do that one thing. Maybe one day I will.” The days go by. The goal never arrives, and then we wonder why or blame circumstance.

But when we learn to take charge of our lives and the world
around us, we start living life with intention.

“I should do that,” becomes “This is how I start”. Deliberately forging a path to our goals and dreams, we figure out what we want in life and then start taking steps there.

Of course, striking out may seem scary. It takes courage to live life with purpose and on purpose. Roadblocks and worries, fears and concerns show up everywhere.

This is my passion. I want to help you to find that sense of your own unique play to meet the world so that you can:

  • Create a life that is yours.
  • Find and follow an inner guide in a way that works for you and those you care for.
  • Decide on your obligations and meet them while building the world you want.

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These products use or are based on Getting Things Done® or GTD® Principles. They are not affiliated with, approved or endorsed by David Allen or the David Allen Company, which is the creator of the Getting Things Done® system for personal productivity. GTD® and Getting Things Done® are registered trademarks of the David Allen Company For more information on the David Allen Company’s products the user may visit their website at www.davidco.com.

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