A day for cheating
It's 5 till 6PM and I still haven't written anything today. I promised myself only a few days ago that I would blog every day for thirty days - something I picked up from the blog 'new ways forward'.
It sounded like a great idea till today when I have only 20 minutes till I head out on a date with my wife - something far more important than blogging.
So as I thought and fretted about whether or not I would get anything written I realized that it's days like today that it's ok to cheat a little.
What do I mean by cheating a little?
I mean taking just a few minutes to type out what it is you're doing - simple observations of why I've chosen to write and why I should or shouldn't continue to do so. Basically I'm allowing today to be a day for gaining perspective.
Which is exactly why I'm enjoying writing every day. Something about writing allows you to look at what you're doing slowly enough to see the flaws and the opportunities you would otherwise miss in a normal thinking pattern.
Writing is deliberate thinking and that forces a certain part of the brain (at least my brain, it seems) to gain an appreciation for what it is your committed to.
If I attempt to sum my purpose for all of this up in a sentence, it would probably look something like this:
I'm committed to following Jesus with all the grit I can muster each day of my life.
Writing helps me do that.
If I were to give you advice (whether you take it or not is up to you and none of my business), I'd say decide what you want your life to be about. Make sure it's a worthwhile goal. Then find out what helps you do that more and allow for time to reflect on and refine that choice.
Look at that... 15 minutes pass and a blog-post written... maybe cheating isn't always a bad idea.... (of course I only meaning cheating in this context... let's not get ahead of ourselves here...)
It sounded like a great idea till today when I have only 20 minutes till I head out on a date with my wife - something far more important than blogging.
So as I thought and fretted about whether or not I would get anything written I realized that it's days like today that it's ok to cheat a little.
What do I mean by cheating a little?
I mean taking just a few minutes to type out what it is you're doing - simple observations of why I've chosen to write and why I should or shouldn't continue to do so. Basically I'm allowing today to be a day for gaining perspective.
Which is exactly why I'm enjoying writing every day. Something about writing allows you to look at what you're doing slowly enough to see the flaws and the opportunities you would otherwise miss in a normal thinking pattern.
Writing is deliberate thinking and that forces a certain part of the brain (at least my brain, it seems) to gain an appreciation for what it is your committed to.
If I attempt to sum my purpose for all of this up in a sentence, it would probably look something like this:
I'm committed to following Jesus with all the grit I can muster each day of my life.
Writing helps me do that.
If I were to give you advice (whether you take it or not is up to you and none of my business), I'd say decide what you want your life to be about. Make sure it's a worthwhile goal. Then find out what helps you do that more and allow for time to reflect on and refine that choice.
Look at that... 15 minutes pass and a blog-post written... maybe cheating isn't always a bad idea.... (of course I only meaning cheating in this context... let's not get ahead of ourselves here...)
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