Time is Slipping and Other Foolish Anxieties
Beyond my typical fears—snakes, rodents, spiders, bats (are
bats rodents? All I know is that they creep me out)—it’s less tangible ones
that grab the most purchase in my brain. Fear of failure is one, although I try
to use it to motivate me and honestly, I know that my biggest successes have
mostly come after failure/falling on my face/really mucking things up. So
failure has become less a fear than inevitability of the journey.
May sound strange, but time is a big fear for me. As
in: I’m afraid there won’t be enough it. Afraid that in the limited amount I’ve
got (whatever that might be, and once you climb over 40 you admit that you have
no clue about that but probably you’re not immortal, so you better stop
watching Bravo and GET GOING), I won’t achieve/attempt/see/experience
everything I want to. Sometimes, that’s sort of paralyzing—like a too-big
restaurant menu. When I see one of those, I become clueless. What do I want? Salad? Soup? That werid-sounding eggplant thing even though I know up until now I've hated eggplant? What if I pick something I hate? Yeah, I know—insane, right? Just pick. But sometimes
it’s hard and the chatter in my head reminds me that I don’t want to be like a
certain relative who shall remain nameless, who always ordered the exact same
thing because “That’s what I like.” Which meant the only Italian dish she’d
ever eaten was lasagna. And while that’s comforting, I suppose, and easier for
sure, I get itchy thinking about living like that.
So it spills over, you know? This time thing. And I want to
write all the books RIGHT NOW. And travel to all the places and see all the stuff in those places, and participate in
all the events, and OH NO! I didn’t get asked to be on that panel? Don’t they
know I might get hit by a bus tomorrow? The worst kind of internal noise. The kind that turns vacations in death marches while I check items off the itinerary. "Hurry! We have to see the Big Ball of Twine. I think it has a gift shop."
Still, I know the fear, like my failure fear, has prompted
some good choices. Three years ago I realized that there simply was not enough
time in the day for me to successfully balance teaching 175 secondary English
students, write one or two books a year, promote and travel for those books,
and also live my life and be present for that life with my family and friends.
So I stopped teaching full time, and took the scary income hit that came with
that. Sometimes I miss it. But I don’t miss spending eight to twelve hours
almost every weekend grading papers.
But I find other ways to angst about filling my time as
completely as I can. Is that a good thing? Possibly not.
I’m not the only one thinking about this. Check out this article from The New York Times.
It would be easier to just be afraid of ghosts.
Only then what would I have written about?
Speaking of which, have I mentioned that my next book for Soho Press, IT WASN'T ALWAYS LIKE THIS (Spring 2016), is about a girl, a boy, a fountain of youth, and what happens when you're stuck at 17? So I guess the idea of endless time has been on my brain for other reasons as well. My editor's too. For my birthday last week, he sent me a book called IMMORTALITY. (I didn't tell him that when I first pulled it out of the box, I thought it said IMMORALITY. Which is an entirely different subject.)
I like your analogy about the too-big restaurant menu! Great post. :)
ReplyDeleteI've seen several articles relating to this fear--one of them was titled something like, "Everyone is Going to Miss Almost Everything." Sad but true.
ReplyDeleteWell, when you put it that way… I guess it is true!
DeleteI love what you said about the "death marches." When my vacations started becoming what I called "endurance tests," I gave myself permission to do a little more loafing.
ReplyDeleteEvery year, my New Year's resolution is to do less and slow down more, to enjoy the present.
"Enjoy the present." Absolutely!
DeleteYay for mucking things up! ;)
ReplyDeleteI have a definite fear of time as well, but ultimately I'm hoping it'll spur me into action and actually get my book written! Loving the restaurant analogy - I'm exactly the same! I made a little promise to myself when I came back from China that I would order something different from the menu each time I went back to a restaurant...it's a baby step, but it helps ;)
ReplyDeleteI didn't realize how many people would tell me they relate to the menu analogy! '1st world problems', I know, but it's true!
DeleteJoy, as always I’m relating heavily to your post (and there isn’t even any Buffy or Star Trek this time!). I turned 35 this year and I am definitely worried about time. Time to write all the books. Time to travel all the places. And is there still time to have a kid? And I think I’ve been more time-focused than I realized for a while because of my attempt to Do All The Things which really made life wayyyy to stressful. I’ve slowed down and taken more time for myself in the past year and strangely, I seem to be doing more things!
ReplyDeleteI could have added a Buffy reference, I'm sure! Ha! And I agree --when I slow down and take time off, don't write while on vacation, etc., I have more focus when I get back to it. So for me, ignoring the 'noise' that comes when I read about this one or that one writing EVERY DAY, is more healthy.
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