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Tuesday, May 5, 2009

The Daily Discipline of Writing

I have not always loved writing. In fact, I do not love writing. It is an unhappy love affair with only brief moments of satisfaction. But, I persist. And, it is good discipline for the mind to write daily.

From the age of six and into my twenties, I practiced piano daily (except for Sundays, when I played in church as I grew into my teens, or on vacations). Some days it was a despised chore and on others it was a pleasant escape – especially as I began to find music on my own that I loved playing. Since piano practice time had to be shared with my brother and two sisters, I often chose the morning slot at 6 a.m. in the morning.

I am calling on that imprinted practice of daily discipline, now. I probably won’t be up at 6 a.m. every morning, but I will try to make a habit of daily thought writing. I am sure that my reward will be remembering better what I’ve read, meditated on and prayed about – and even developing new ideas and connections or exploring concepts I’m writing about in longer format.

So … here goes!

2 comments:

  1. Maybe you need a narrowly defined topic, so you don't get totally overwhelmed. Maybe you could write only about... say, medieval dating practices. Or reviews of road signage. Or urban planning for nomads.

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  2. You're right. Some days, my thought life is an open mine field. I was thinking of focusing on organic gardening practices of banana plantations in Fiji - so I could go there for research.

    ReplyDelete