Monday, August 11, 2014

Why I Write

Today’s post is part of a blog hop that I was invited to participate in by my friend, Julie Scipioni McKown, co-author or the novel, Iris and Lily (irisandlilythenovel.com).  The objective is to write a post about why I write ...



I will reframe this answer to the question of “why” I write to “if I didn’t write.”

If I didn’t write I wouldn’t know what I thought, what I believed, or who I am. I honestly don’t know how people discover those things about themselves without writing!

The author, Joan Didion, expressed how I feel about writing: "I write entirely to find out what I'm thinking, what I'm looking at, what I see and what it means. What I want and what I fear."

We are fickle people and master con artists. At any moment in time, our thoughts and egos conspire to convince us that “THIS” is how we think … “THIS” is what we believe … and “THIS” is who we are. And, of course, that “THIS” changes from day-to-day, hour-to-hour, and minute-to-minute. It’s a fast train to constantly shifting destinations and we are hostages on it.

As a Buddhist, I have personally experienced how meditation can slow down the train, fix the destination, and free us from captivity. But there is another way to accomplish the same thing: writing.

I believe I innately understood that, even as a young child. I kept journals for as long as I could write (they were “diaries” when I was a child in the 1950s). I needed to write to express, but—more importantly—I needed to think the thoughts that led to the words. I needed to have words on paper, so that I could read them back and understand myself. This was how I got to know myself.

It is no different for me now. If I don’t slow down enough to identify my thoughts and feelings by writing them, they take control of me and gallop away, only to bolt to the next thought or emotion that I didn’t even know I was thinking or feeling—until, of course, the emotion got stronger and stronger, capturing my mind and my energy.

In Buddhism, we refer to that as grasping. And it’s the grasping that makes us unhappy. It’s the grasping that kidnaps us and makes us hostages on the runaway train of our relentless egos and jumpy monkey minds. You know the deal: someone mentions they just bought something … or they are going to start this class … or start eating this diet … or do that exercise. Then your grabby little mind says, “I want to do that, too!” But do you?

So, you try it and realize that it is definitely something you do not want to do. Hold on a second! If you had explored the option, pausing a few minutes to consider the follow-on activities and consequences of the thing your mind wanted, you would have known you didn’t want it before buying, trying, or doing.

That’s part of what meditation is about and that’s what writing is about, too. Most of us go through our days thinking, feeling, and doing without a conscious say in the matter. But it’s easy to fix and you don’t even have to meditate! Pick up a notebook or your laptop/tablet, start a journal, and write. You will be surprised at who you find there!

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Here are the next three people in the blog hop:



Fran Rossi Szpylczyn is a former corporate executive turned Catholic lay minister and writer who lives near Albany, NY. She explores the intersection of faith and everyday life at her blog, There Will Be Bread, but not every day!

Cheryl Kornegay is an EMT in NC. She is passionate about her job in healthcare and loves having the opportunity to help others in the community. Cheryl is the mother of a child with Adrenoleukodystrophy and was recently diagnosed as a symptomatic carrier. In her spare time, she writes sci-fi and adventure fiction, does yoga, and volunteers with her family. Check out her blog, Gabriel's Journey at gabrielald.blogspot.com.


Rosa Elizabeth Vargas is a job search strategist, interview-winning executive resume writer, and branding specialists with four of the Career Industry’s Top Resume Writing Certifications. Rosa is a multiple TORI (Toast of the Resume Industry) award winner, nominated for Best Executive Resume and Best Creative Resume TORI nominations in 2010, with four nominations and three wins in 2011. You can read Rosa's blog at careersteering.com.




New Blog: Suchness IS Things As They Are ... and It's All Good!

After a long blogging absence, I'M BAAAAAAACK!

My old blog site, Posterous, shut down in April 2013. Since then I've been on a blogging sabbatical. Not that I haven't written. I'm still writing about all kinds of things ... and still lots of Buddhist ramblings. More about why I write in my first official post, "Why I Write."

A little housekeeping first ...

My Posterous blog was called "Things as They Are: Buddhist Ramblings." After finding my way over here to Blogger, I discovered there were lots of people writing about "things as they are." Now I have a new name: "Suchness: It's All Good - Buddhist Ramblings." Still ramblings about things just as they are.

What is suchness? Suchness is a reference to Tathatā, which is a key Buddhist concept meaning that in each moment, everything is happening anew. Everything is changing, so every moment—every now—is just as it is at that moment. That means it's not inherently good or bad, even if you think what is happening right now is "good" or "bad."

So, if you feel like you have to label or categorize now, you might as well call it ALL GOOD!

Now for some explanation of the entries. I migrated over most of my blog posts. A couple ended up MIA and a few photos ended up missing, too. The dates that appear on the post, other than today's first two posts ("New Blog" and "Why I Write") are much older than the date will reflect. They won't be in correct chronological order of their original posting date either. But it's all good.

I hope to pop in frequently with a post or two, but until then, feel free to read the old stuff after you read my first entry, "Why I Write."

Small Stones: 1/8/13 - 1/11/13


Small Stone - Tuesday 1/8/13

Pink-striped sunrise
Seeing the day through rose-colored glasses


Small Stone - Wednesday 1/9/13

I looked all day for a stone
a small one at that

But the day presented bigger rocks
and boulders to move about

Looked again tonight before I sleep
and no stone ...
Must be in my shoe


Small Stone - Friday 1/11/13

My birthday. I'm 60.
Something about 60 ...
It looms large, but it's just a day.

Lots of living behind me
But more to come ...
And I saw a rainbow today.