On Writer’s Block – From a Writer to her Reader

I didn’t write my 800 words yesterday. It wasn’t a case of too few ideas, but too many. So many possible things to write about, and so much to write about them.

On the other hand, it was a desire for a royal flush in the writing department. After a number of articles that have struck deep chords in my readers, I found myself becoming attached to the idea of writing about IMPORTANT topics.

If there’s anything that will get in the way of writing, it’s the desire to do it “right”.

I don’t “believe in” writer’s block. Writer’s block, in my opinion, is an excuse not to get writing. A fear-based response to the desire to write “right”.

When writer’s block hits, the only thing to do is to write through it. Pen to page, fingers to keyboard.

It’s not, a that point, about finding something to say, as much as saying anything.

Starting to fill the page.

In many cases the mind will turn toward a topic, and work the topic into a thread in fits and starts. The topic may even be invisible at first, hidden beneath the surface.

Today I find my block be this double-edge quill; too much to say, and the desire for excellence in saying it.

The ideas were flowing like leaves down a runnel yesterday – faster than I could catch them at times.

And the articles I’ve been waiting to write were big and daunting, waiting for the words to find their way to my tongue, or in this case, my fingers, lurking like phatasms in the front of my mind, right behind my eyes.

Too much to say about the Middle East; where can I find the words to tell the stories that found me, that formed me there?

Too much to write about the choice to change my last name; the retrogressive, transgressive act of abdicating my singularity by making a choice so metaphorical and traditional.

Too much to say about the apocalypse.

Spiritual materialism.

And then the new ideas, rushing like rainwater running off a roof, flowing through my fingers.

Words I want to say about the madness that descends on many women who have not found their “perfect” mate.

An open letter to President Obama.

So, out of overwhelm, I found excuses. I had to wait for this and that, I had errands to run, I put writing to the side until it was too late to focus.

In all of this, I got around to yoga again.

Just like writing, just like keeping to healthy habits and away from unhealthy ones, everyday – indeed every moment – is an opportunity for a recommitment.

So, I put fingers to keyboard, release attachment (again and again) to perfection, try to forget about you, my reader – though for me, you are impossible to forget about.

I write from myself, but I am not a writer who writes FOR myself. There are many of these, and more power to you who are.

But I write, nearly all the time, for you. The mostly faceless you – though sometimes I borrow a face, an idea of you to imagine as my reader so that I can find the right words, the context for the conversation, the contours that a talk with you would have, the curves we would wander in our intellectual discourse.

I write for my readers. However few or many might grace me with the gift of their attention, each piece of writing is for the world. This truth is a place where attachments arise for me. So instead of an attachment that stops me, I turn this attachment into a question.

Is the gift I want to offer you a worthy one? Is it worthy of your eyes? Is it a gift worth giving?

When I see the number of readers who read an article spike (yeah, I’m a stats counter…I pay attention to the traffic to my articles), the joy I feel is not gross (as in, unrefined) pride, but a sense of honor that I have been able to offer you a gift that enriched your life in any way.

As a writer, this is all that I hope for; the experience of our minds connecting in aether. A conversation that happens in the abstract.

I do not see writing as a one-way stream of communication. Words need to be heard, or read, to be given meaning. You, dear reader, make writing my ultimate reward.

21*5*800, Day 1 – Practice Makes Presence

Road of Gold - Sun on Water

(Read about the 21*5*800 challenge here.)

Practice is called practice for a reason. We never reach the end of it. There is no end point to practice.

When we apply the word practice to spiritual pursuit, it can tend to gain some onerous weight, like there’s some goal to be reached. Some final gate to walk through. Some level of attainment we are supposed to achieve.

But when we take practice and apply it to the idea of a life-long pursuit, perhaps it makes more sense. Artistic creation requires practice. Long hours at the cello, in front of the canvas, at the keyboard.

Practice never does make perfect, and any illusion that it has is just an excuse to give up growth.

The same applies to healing. There is no “healed” – no golden moment of all our sins being washed away, of complete and permanent peace.

If we are lucky, we may find that peace, complete and perfect, though transitory, in moments of insight, meditation, prayerfulness, presence.

Sitting on a rock outcropping overlooking the Kinneret – the Sea of Galilee, I had one such moment. It was my birthday, and I was in the Holy Land.

(Yes all land is holy, but calling the Holy Land by this name is not inaccurate, and is the most politic way I can refer to the region that is comprised of Israel and Palestine, the war torn region plagued by broken hearts and broken lives on both sides of the ever-moving “green line”.)

Back to the rock out cropping. It was early dawn, and I had left the beaten path, encountered animals alien to me, let my heart overcome fear of walking in the gloaming hours through unknown territory, literally crawled trough brambled bushes and found footing on unsure soil to find this perfect place to greet the sun on the day of my birth.

It wasn’t a special year, just a special day. No decade marker, just the year I happened to respond a divine calling and left for a foreign land by the grace of a God I had a growing relationship with.

I found my special rock, this unknown destination, and prayed while the sun rose over Golan Heights. Light spilled, a cascade of gold filling a perfectly clear day in late May. As it hit the water below and in front of me, it became a golden road spreading in front of me. A road to nowhere, and road with no end, a road to the center.

I dropped into prayer, and asked “What next? What do you want from me next?” All of a sudden there was no next. There was only the road, and me, and where I was on it, with infinite possibility in front of me. I began crying gently, tears rolling down my cheeks. I knew I was already taking every step in perfect grace. That the steps I had taken already had lead me to this divine moment. That there was nothing more called for then perfect faith.

I settled into the awareness of total presence. Or rather, came present to total awareness. I held God holding me in the perfection of that moment.

And then realized I was also holding God. That the presence outside me was inside me, too. That perfection was present in every cell, every atom activated with passionate presence. I was nothing separate. I felt myself ceasing into waves of bliss, the heart beat of the Kinneret, the heart of the dessert, my own heart beating. The air nothing other than my own body. I ceased completely, held by, and holding, and ceasing all at once.

Sometimes awareness of divine states can pull us out of them. But this time was different. I stayed present in the echoing God that was not separate from my own being. Completely secure, and fully dissolved, I was the universe in toto.

Not that it was all me. I became the drop in the ocean, ceasing to be a drop any longer. I was the ocean. The ocean was me.

Rumi talks of this state, using metaphors of sunlight, of water, of drunkenness.

When we break through longing and come present in what is, that is where the road to peace, for one solitary moment, eternal, ends. There is nowhere to go, we are already there. There is nothing to strive for; we are already all that is. There is no longing; we are already home in the beloved.

A Sufi sage, philosopher and theologian, whose name I can’t recall at the moment says God (Allah – the One God is one god), cannot be contained anywhere but in the heart of his “slave”, or to use an easier word, his devotee. The actual quote I will find and tack onto the end of this post. *

Once God has taken over our heart, there is no more longing.

Unfortunately, sooner or later, this state of grace, or at least our attention to it, wavers. We turn away from presence, lose contact, fall away for pure awakening, lose our home in the heart, our own heart, the heart of God.

And then we are reduced to words. Words that will never offer the truth of an experience that is mysterious, the destination that is not a destination out of reach of translation.

There are places where words fall short.

* “My heaven containeth Me not, nor My earth, but the heart of My faithful servant doth contain me.” The Holy Quran, as quoted by Seyyed Hossein Nasr