New Decade New Me
With the hustle and bustle of the holidays I found myself
without time or the focus to write or work on anything other than my book. This
year I spent a Christmas apart from my family out of necessity to save my
marriage, though, in truth, the reality was a little less hyperbolic. This
holiday season, I made some interesting discoveries, changed some vital
behaviors, learned that I was suffering under some kind of banal alcoholism,
all—it would seem—in preparation for the decade ahead of 2020.
Where to go from here then? That’s the question, isn’t it? I
have vacillated on the possibility of either quitting my job or reducing my
hours to part time to pursue—more aggressively at least—my writing career once
Eowyn starts kindergarten. Joining local writing groups. Being more active in
my peer community. Submitting stories to journals. Crowdsourcing for insight
and strategies that I could not otherwise formulate on my own… I could go on.
But I struggle with whether or not this is a selfish thing. Being a Youtube
star, or a writer that couch surfs from apartment to apartment, takes no
particular brand of courage when there’s nothing to lose. (And I don’t mean to
intimate this as something particularly disparaging to those in my circle of
friends that have done this/continue to do this successfully.) But when there’s
a family involved, when your child is depending on you for a good life, the
picture becomes hopelessly muddy. Can one be virtuous these days, while still
being “dangerous”? Something to pray on, then.
Much to my chagrin, my unprofessional dispositions at work
have led to the reality of being held back (yet again) in life from joining my
contemporaries in the sun. My arrogance, like some Aesop fable, has prompted me
to very painfully come to terms with where my career is going and how I should
continue. It fucking sucks and it makes me so depressed.
Silver linings... At least I have a new desk. |
Busy at work... |
I’ve wanted to produce another “Little Bits” post, but I
keep forgetting to record my momentary sparks of “genius” when they are
prompted by some cursory observation or thought. Similarly, an opportunity
arises every so often to write a short story, but these moments always come
when I am pressed up against an unmovable deadline (ie. I have to go to
work/church/bible study/the store/in laws’ house). Perhaps the imminent danger
of being late to something get’s the juices flowing? Possibly. But this goes
back to previous posts, lost somewhere in the ether, where I’ve mentioned the
ease of writing a short story versus a novel. Short stories are accessible and
“punchy.” (The structure of a short story is “Look here!”, then “Oh snap!”
whereas a novel adds an additional piece: “So what?”) They are formulated with
relative ease, and any subsequent work is less focused on the verbosity of the
content but on its composition and flow. Lawd! A novel requires investment and
an endurance that I somehow possess in the literary realm, but not in the
social and occupational strata of my life. Anyways… this little rabbit trail is
brought to you by my lack of focus and my lack of communication these past few
weeks.
(…)
One thing that I’ve noticed now that I’ve been 31 for a
while and have suffered a major setback in my professional career is the
transition from a somewhat youthful awareness and motivation to a laid-back,
adult complacency. It’s very strange. Everything now seems deliberate, as
opposed to spontaneous. Life choices are weighted by the amount of chaos that
would be injected into the ongoing domestic equation. It kind of sucks, but I’m
hard pressed to establish an alternative life hack to change this pattern. How
does one pursue a “van life” with a family? Probably not very easily,
definitely not once the kid reaches the age of public schooling. (That is
unless you are a huge piece of shit.) The shadow of domesticity isn’t that bad
though, now that I’ve settled into it with Alyssa. There is a flow, a routine.
I can expect certain things and rule out others. As 2020 rolls out, I have many
ambitions that I hope to see happen. I want to print my next book, run a Kickstarter,
and better establish myself as a writer. Hopefully that’s possible with that
additional stability on hand? After doing taxes this year, I can say with some
certainty that we are “doing okay,” but there’s always something else, isn’t
there? I have a feeling that this year, somehow, will be a “shit or get off the
pot” kind of year.