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Walking Away
Do you know the writer Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi? He’s a
Hungarian psychologist who writes about the state of flow. If you’re in a
creative state, then essentially things sort of coagulate and you enter
a state of hyperconsciousness—you can write for an hour or so, but it
only seems like a few minutes because you’re so concentrated on it. I’ve
experienced that a lot, which doesn’t mean there’s no frustration, but I
don’t really remember the frustration very well. I remember more when
the writing comes together. And I’m willing to seek out that coming
together. If I get frustrated, I’ll go eat something, I’ll go open
another Diet Coke, I’ll go to the barn, I’ll distract myself, and then
the parts in my brain that were working click and I get an idea. I read
an article about how to learn to play a musical instrument. You
practice, practice, practice on Friday, then you walk away. And then
when you sit down on Saturday, you’re better. Not only because of all
the practice, but also because of the walking away. I’m a firm believer
in walking away.
JANE SMILEY
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