Tag Archives: blogging

Why Did I Begin?

Typical brands of Potato Chips at a superstore.

Image via Wikipedia

I have been blogging since May of 2005.  Not an early adopter, by any means, but right in the middle of the wave.  For my profession, however, I was on the vanguard.

I had just turned 50! My life was very different than I thought it would be.  My marriage had ended three years previously, after almost twenty-five years.  I had been a college professor for ten years, but the same year as my divorce, I “left town ahead of an angry mob.”  Such is academic life.  And during it all, 2001-2004, I was engaged in the most profound experience of my life:  the training program to become a teacher of the Feldenkrais Method.

I had moved to a new town and was trying to make my way in private practice. I was just beginning to get some traction.  A year after graduation, I was beginning to have a sustaining practice, when some of my colleagues who had been practicing for years seemed to be struggling.  I started blogging because I wanted to share.  I wanted to share my perspective, and I wanted to share my work with a larger audience — with my clients, and with those who might someday be clients — of someone.  I also wanted to share my way of being, and being in practice, and of thinking and speaking about the Method, with my colleagues.  We Feldenkrais teachers tend to be a bit verbose, and more than a little arcane at times.  Upon encountering a thirsty one, we proceed to drown him, when only a cupful would save his life.  In sharp contrast, I like to give people “one potato chip:”  just enough to make them want more.  I have used this ability to create a small but loyal readership for my blog, and to reach out to others. Social media, and Twitter particularly, with its 140-keystroke constraint, is a delightful challenge, and my medium of choice.  Less is more.

I tend to do everything in fits and starts.  The blogging thing, the eblasts, all ebb and flow with my attention and enthusiasm.  However, after several years of experimentation, I think I have finally discovered a work flow that works for me.  I have also noticed some shifts in my self-image.

Moshe Feldenkrais said, “We act in accordance with our self-image.”  This powerful sentence can be interpreted at many levels.  I have only recently begun to perceive myself, and embrace myself, as a writer.  In the past six weeks, I have been acting like a writer.  I see myself as a writer.  I behave like a writer:  I now write every single day.  As I have stopped telling myself, “You’re not REALLY a writer,” as I have stopped discounting my creations as “That’s not REALLY writing,” I have lowered my standards enough that I actually enjoy the process of writing and creating.  I believe in the story I have to tell, the information I have to share, the perspective I have to offer.  It is not the only thing I do, but it is and has become an important part of my self-expression.

In no regard does my self-image as a writer “crowd out” or negate the other things I am: a Feldenkrais teacher, a musician, a mother of adult children; a partner, a WordPress aficionado, a friend, an advisor, a connector.  The web I weave is one that supports me, and those I care about. How much human potential is wasted in the mistaken notion that we can only be, or do, one thing?

And so — my original purpose in blogging has remained true, and has continued to resonate, even after five years — which is a long time on “the internets.”  I hope I continue to grow and adapt, and the blog with me.  I seem to be made for self-expression, and to help others to more fully express themselves. Might as well ride the horse the direction it’s going!

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One Word

reverb10

As part of my rituals for observing the end of 2010 and the beginning of 2011, I’m participating in an online creativity project called #reverb10.  Bloggers and other creatives will write, photograph, and otherwise create a body of expression around the theme of looking back at 2010 and manifesting “what’s next.”

I had a conversation about this very topic with my friend and colleague Ger Nevin.  Faced with several days of bachelorhood as his wife and daughters took a little “girls-getaway” trip, Ger was cleaning out drawers, closets, and his garage; evaluating what he wanted to hang onto, and what no longer reflected who he is about, now.  And he said, “I am still working with this whole idea that the world I see around me is a reflection of what is going on in my mind>’

That’s what #reverb10 is about.

So, without further ado, here is the prompt for the day, and my response.  Oh, wait, a bit of “ado.”  I’m going to be doing this every day until the end of the month — that is the plan.  So I hope you will join me, as a reader, and perhaps as a creator as well.

Prompt: One Word. Encapsulate the year 2010 in one word. Explain why you’re choosing that word. Now, imagine it’s one year from today, what would you like the word to be that captures 2011 for you?

To sum up 2010 in one word — I choose “cultivation.” It was a year of bringing a big project into existence — a professional teacher training program in the work I do, called the Feldenkrais Method.  After two years of planning and recruiting, the rubber hit the road, and we began the program in May 2010, right on target.  We have continued to attract students to our program, and in one way, the existence of this training is a sort of “coming to fruition.”  But it’s not about the training itself, it’s about the people in the training.  As I learn more about how to be in service to others, how to respect each person’s individual process and way of learning, I see that the year has been one of cultivation, nurturing, maintaining — and a lot of hard work!  All worth it.

What one word would I like to sum up as I look back on 2011, this time next year?  That’s easy – “Abundance.” To look everywhere and be thankful for all the good that has arrived.  Abundance is not just about finances — it’s that joyful sense of “there is plenty” in every aspect of life:  So, yes, financial abundance from my Feldenkrais practice, and from known and unknown sources of supply. An abundance of eager students in our program.  Abundant fun, enjoyment, and wonder in the work itself.  Abundance of love and laughter in relationships, of happiness in work, of vibrant good health to enjoy, and in creative expression.  Looking for abundance to appear in the future makes me all the more conscious that it is everywhere, now.

Curious about #reverb10?  Find out more at reverb10.com

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