Lately I have been contemplating something very radical. It is a thought so heretical that I can only make little mental forays toward it, and then, reversing quickly, divert myself with some other compelling distraction.
I have gone so far as to try on what a day might look like if I carried through with the consequences of the idea…gone so far…and then quickly, like a mouse rushing toward the safety of its lair, I’ve reversed the decision and reverted to my usual routine.
This crazy plan, this harebrained scheme, this complete turnabout in my life is the unorthodox idea of no longer keeping a journal.
See? I told you it was life-threatening.
Now, if you are not a regular journal keeper, this might not seem like a major decision. But I have hand-written three pages each morning for the last seventeen years of my life. And truly, I have journals that go back for another twenty-five more years before that.
It is my ritual. My routine. This is how a day starts: a coffee by my side, my journal open in front of me, and the pen in motion. Some days I write longer, but very rarely do I write any less than three-fully-scrawled pages. One might conclude that I am rather disciplined in this approach.
And therein lies my reasoning to abdicate the practise.
You might say that self-discipline was encouraged in our house. Growing up on Cherry Street, my mother somehow managed to stuff two pianos and an organ into our little pink and yellow house. One daughter, usually Diane, would wear the headphones and practise the organ, Rhonda would be pounding out scales on the living room piano and the third daughter (that would be me) would be at the end of the hall practising the latest scales and Royal Conservatory pieces…for up to four hours each day.
So, yes, I know all about about drills and mastery of a routine. Indeed I do.
As much as I have enjoyed my journal habit, I have been wondering if it is just that same early-childhood learning dressed up in a new sheepy-disguise. Is my morning habit just one more thing I feel I need to accomplish to justify my existence? Surely that can’t still be the case?
But in my ongoing process of self-discovery and awareness, I am so often the last to know what’s really going on in my head. I swear perfect strangers often have a better read on what I’m about than I do.
So. There’s only one way to find out what this might look like: I’m going cold turkey on the journal thing.
I will still take notes and keep a journal on trips and on a random as-I-feel-like-it basis. But no more will I just do it because ‘that’s what I do’.
I hereby declare my life to be journal free. I know it’s kind of crazy, but this actually makes my hands sweat as I write this.
Now of course, I have a new problem. In my new downsized and now, journal-free life…what do I do with all those bins and boxes of journals?
Holy shit.
WOW! Journal every day! Such discipline. I’ve tried a journal – was not happy reading the past messages as I could feel the “weight” of the past as was mentioned here. And I tried the Royal Conservatory route – was too heavy a harness as well. I am imagining the lightness of your spirit when it is allowed to write from inspiration rather than from dedication. I’m excitedly awaiting the “new lightness” of your blog!!
You’re right Karen. It is crazy-discipline, which is, I guess, why I thought it might be time to practise truly Traveling Light a little more by abandoning it.
Discipline was drilled into my head as the absolute ultimate goal. People that were undisciplined or ‘gave up’ were frowned upon in my world. I have finally come to realize that there are different ways (gasp!) of looking at these things.
Better late than never!
You don’t need to make any declarations or decisions on the matter whatsoever. You can simply write on the days you feel like it, and leave the journal alone when you don’t. You seem to be saying you want to be free of the compulsion to write, that you doubt if it is still serving your needs. Perhaps you crave another way to explore your inner reaches, like meditation or art.
As to what to do with your boxes of journals, here’s a question for you: when you look at them, do they feel like they are a weight you must bear or a treasure to re-explore? I would say they are exactly what you wrote in your last line, holy shit.
Carol, I didn’t communicate my thoughts clearly…what I am trying to say is that I want to be free from the compulsion of self-discipline. To be free of the dutiful nature of a routine/habit that’s ‘good for me’.
And you’re right, my new plan is just to write when I feel like it…which is often 🙂 BUT I don’t want it to be a thing that is such a piece of my self-identity. I guess what I’m trying to do is shake off things that I always do and ask myself anew, if it’s actually what I want to be doing or am I simply doing it because I’ve always done it that way?
As for the Holy Shit (love that!) question. The terrible answer is that both things are true: “…they are a weight I must bear AND a treasure to re-explore. Hence the conundrum.
Hi Colleen,
Never associated the Royal Conservatory drill with adult protocols. You’ve given me new insights. Thank you! And good luck!!
Liz
Liz, do I detect a fellow survivor of the Royal Conservatory scale book?