Yesterday I made a commitment to give up destructive
counting. To stop measuring calories or
inches or pounds or dollars earned. To cease
classifying myself as greater than , equal to, or less than anyone else. To give up the Mad Girl Math for 30 days.
Initially I felt a calming sense of relief. Shortly after that, a kind of wonder about
what I would do with the left-over “thought time” formerly taken up by counting. Since much of this time was spent privately while
in the presence of others (I can count and judge myself silently while
multi-tasking), just being present
could logically fill in that time. And I
like the sound of this. Imagine being fully present while enjoying a
meal with someone I love. A
remarkable benefit right out of the gate.
After a few hours, though, the urge to count took its
toll. And in the absence of old
measurements, what did I count? The number of people who read this blog, of
course. I counted page views, followers,
comments and likes. To be truthful, I
didn’t have to count them. Blogger
provides an excellent overview page with significant markers indicating
my success or failure at sharing my true feelings with potential readers. I was riveted. I could even see the geographic
distribution of my readership, and spent no small amount of time wondering who had
viewed my page from France.
Surely that must point to some degree of success. Day one, and I’m world-wide. Mad
Girl Math? In the very worst way.
And while I was loath to force myself away from the numbers,
doing so opened me up to something new.
I found a pleasantly surprising
comfort in the experience I was
having. I had written my first blog. It’s been more than 40 years since I first
put pencil to paper (but who’s counting?), and every day since, I’ve wanted to
share my words with others. Today I did
that. When I looked away from the
numbers, when I just sat with myself and my fear and my silly wonder at
what possessed me to throw words up on the Internet, I had a buzzing sensation
that did not go away. My success was
irrelevant. My joy was in the driver’s
seat.
I once contacted a wonderful sports/life coach while
training for a marathon. I was having trouble
completing my long runs, and feeling anxiety about doing things I’d done before
without issue – things I had committed myself to do. Coach Jerry told me that on my next long run
I should avoid thinking about the workout as a 17-mile endeavor. Instead, he said to run one mile, 17 times. And as I
finished each mile, I was to ask myself: Do I
feel like going again? His advice
seemed a bit like semantics to me, but I tried it none-the-less. And something took over. I became present to each mile – to the joy,
the pain, the breathlessness, the freedom of an individual mile. The number 17 lost its power over me. I ran because I chose to. Not because my training schedule told me to. Because I could – not because I should.
This presence to experience, this awareness to what is
happening right in the moment, is a beautiful gift. We so easily club ourselves with the
numbers. How many miles to go? How many moments before the work day
ends? How many glasses of wine before I
feel relief? How many pounds must I shed
before I am right? But the numbers take us out of the moment,
into a dimension that is unreal, unsatisfying, and unproductive. This moment, this experience, this feeling…
this is what is real. And what is real makes us feel real.
Do we sing because people are listening? Or because we love to sing? Do we write because people are reading? Or because we love to write? Do we diet and struggle and weigh ourselves
because of how harshly people might judge us – or worse, how harshly we might
judge ourselves? Or do we eat an apple
over a Twinkie because it tastes better going down, gives us a lift, and
provides us with what we really need to feel good?
Yesterday I was lured by the Mad Girl Math of writing. Today I decided to write by the words, rather
than the numbers. I decided to put one
finger in front of the other and move forward.
In this moment, I feel safe and sound.
In this experience, I am immediately rewarded.
How about you?
3 comments:
I am really enjoying your blog. I am truly a numbers person: gpa, measurements, averages, calories in and calories out, time spent on a,b,c, and force myself to accomplish 8 things a day (even though apparently we can only really accomplish 6 things a day), etc., etc., etc. So, what I am trying to say is that your blog you wrote yesterday spoke to me and I understand how old habits died hard today. I don't know I can quit. Right now, I don't have the strength to try. But understanding the importance, I'm reading and listening :)
Good stuff Sis. Checking myself all day long thinking about your point of view. I would be lying if I said I really changed anything today but in the end you got me thinking about it and more importantly, I think, about other people and how i judge them. I have never been one to judge myself by the numbers but I can certainly be a better person by removing them from my day to day. Keep it up.
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