In two days I get to go white-water rafting for the very first time. In five days Eldest turns eighteen. In nine days he moves into his dorm room and two weeks after that, I send my littles off to school.
It doesn’t matter what we have in front of us, as long as we have something to look forward to.
In life, it’s getting an education, securing a career, raising children and retiring comfortably. In writing, it’s writing a book, sending a query and getting published.
Yet, amid the myriad of dreams, goals and expectations we have for ourselves, things can get off track. I’m here to tell you that this is perfectly okay–as long as we keep something in front of us to motivate us. By our very nature, humans need emotional fulfillment. We need to accomplish things–large or small. We need to succeed.
But we often set humongous goals for ourselves and keep those so tightly focused in our minds that we forget all the baby steps along the way. We get so overwhelmed by this seemingly untouchable dream that we lose our spirit, our motivation and our passion. We let this unattainable goal press down on us to the point where it forces our failure rather than leads to our success.
Last week we vacationed with Dear Hubby’s family. All twenty-one aunts, uncles, cousins and grandparents were there. During the course of the week, Eldest must have heard 2001 pep talks about his upcoming college endeavor. One had a huge impact on him and he relayed it to me on our way to his orientation.
His uncle pointed out that college is like a trip to California. You know where you will ultimately end up, but you can’t focus on that. You can’t look at the map of California and expect to arrive safely from across the country. Instead, you have to concentrate on what is directly in front of you–what you can see in your headlight beams. Because if you’re only looking at pictures of the beach, you’re going to crash right into the deer standing in your way.
When you feel overwhelmed by your life path, what do you do to slow it down? How do you keep focused and keep moving forward?
Curious minds want to know.
Feeling that way these days! All that querying and the doubts and the redoing and falling into the ‘ depths of despair’! I look at my youngest two and remember they are growing up so fast and I don’t want to miss that! Then I give myself an imaginary slap and say ‘so what ? why is writing becoming a pain when I am supposed to enjoy it? I still have life to enjoy with working arms and legs and all my senses in tact! I can always self publish right?
Right! The minute we lose our passion, is the moment we should quit writing. Until then, enjoy the journey and look forward to life one head light at a time!