I had a notion this weekend that I would write this blog post on Sunday afternoon/evening and set it up to publish itself‒so to speak‒this morning. Then, I would use this morning to perhaps review an/or rebegin HELIOS, or maybe to work on Outlaw’s Mind or DFandD. I even thought I could write any of those‒especially HELIOS‒on my smartphone, since I have them on Google Docs as well as MS Word.
So I thought, anyway. When I looked, though, I found that I don’t actually appear to have any version of HELIOS on my Google drive, so it must either be on Word or I never typed in the little bit I had of it. Of course, I could have just decided to restart and bring one of my spiral bound notebooks and write in that. The only trouble with doing it that way, if I write during my morning commute, is that I eventually have to retype everything into one of my computers or smartphones.
Now, I have never done the thing* of handwriting a first draft and then copying it into a phone, but I have done that with handwriting and computer word processors. That method has produced some of my best stuff (by some measures), including Mark Red, The Chasm and the Collision, Paradox City, and even part of The Vagabond, though that last one was written mainly on WriteNow on a Mac SE. So, maybe the handwritten-to-smartphone idea could actually work pretty well, now that I think about it.
Anyway, all that’s fairly moot, because I did not in fact write this blog post on Sunday afternoon nor yet on Sunday evening. I am writing it, as I usually do, in the morning, in the midst of my commute to the office, which is so effing early, but which is nevertheless far later than when I woke up.
I’m more than a bit disappointed in myself for failing to carry through with that idea, but it’s easy to think of ideas that seem so doable when you first think of them. And they are doable, of course. Not only is it physically possible for me to have written this post yesterday evening and to set a precedent of doing the blog posts in the evening and writing fiction in the morning, it’s banal. If you told someone that had happened, they would be unlikely to do much more than shrug and say something like a noncommittal “cool”, before going on their way.
But as we all know‒or should know‒it’s much easier to intend to do things in the future than it is to muster the motivation to do them in the moment when one was hoping to do them. There are many shifting, often conflicting, drives in the human** psyche, and our actions are born of a kind of vector sum of all those “forces” in any given moment.
But not only do those forces shift due to things as seemingly mundane as one’s current state of appetite or fatigue, but they are also affected by what one has done immediately before; for the outcome of that vector sum in one instant feeds back on the system in numerous places, changing the sum (I was going to write “changing the calculus” but I thought that might be mathematically confusing and even misleading, since I am not discussing calculus) with every new iteration. These iterations and changes aren’t quite happening on the scale of the Planck time***, but they happen quickly‒certainly at least at the “speed of thought”, whatever that might be.
Even the physiological, hormonal, energy state of the body from moment to moment changes those vectors, sometimes a great deal. If you find yourself needing to use the bathroom while you’re trying to accomplish some task, it can certainly change the state of your concentration. And if you should suddenly begin to have difficulty breathing, it will distract you from pretty much anything else.
That’s why on airplanes they tell you that, in case of cabin depressurization, if you’re traveling with someone who needs help putting on the oxygen mask, put yours on first, before you help your companion. If you can’t breathe, your ability to help anyone else is going to tank very rapidly. We can live weeks to months without food, days without water, but only minutes without air.
On a less extreme angle, if one is hypoglycemic (for whatever reason), it strongly affects all the functions of one’s body, particularly one’s neuroendocrine system. Less extreme but more persistent issues can sabotage one’s focus upon much else.
I don’t need to tell you, probably, that pain makes it much harder to focus and bring effort to bear on other things. This is one of the most annoying aspects of chronic pain: one does not quite ever become accustomed to it, because that would miss the whole biological point of pain. Making pain something you could ignore would be a bit like making a fire alarm that plays soft, easy-listening elevator music at unobtrusive decibel levels. It would be less annoying, but being burned to death in a fire is a bigger issue, even if it isn’t very likely.
Of course, if your (typical) fire alarm is stuck on, you may not ever be able completely to ignore it. You also will not know when there is a real fire. Or at least you will be less likely to know. And since that can potentially be a matter of life and death, the chronic alarm, like chronic pain, is in its own manifold ways life-threatening.
All that is very tangential to my original point, which was that I am writing this blog today, not writing fiction (at least not this morning on my commute).
Oh, well. If there’s one day I can let myself get away with slacking a bit, I guess it’s today. I hope you all have a good one.
*How’s that for clever, descriptive writing?
**Or whatever I am.
***Though the processes that underlie them do.

Well at least you are writing. Fiction, non-fiction, serious, not serious–who cares?
Fair point.
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