Reboot Day 19: Predictable

A sadly pre­dictable med­i­ta­tion today. I was tired — I went to bed on time last night, and it felt like I slept pretty soundly, but I woke up tired and with a headache that I didn’t really shake.

I went for a 5K jog before this evening’s run, but even that, fol­lowed by some food, that nor­mally perks me up a bit, at least, didn’t help me keep any con­cen­tra­tion tonight. It was basi­cally just 15 min­utes sit­ting and drift­ing, pretty uncon­trol­lably, with no notice­able moments of focus.

Oh well. Again, I’m not going to let this put me off my plan of going to bed early this week and see­ing if it makes a dif­fer­ence long-term. So, with that, to bed. See you tomorrow.

Days 23 and 24: On flying and walking

Sat­ur­day: Yes­ter­day was mostly a day of tired­ness and lack of focus. Rather too late I pulled together enough sense to try to turn it around, and took a nap that lasted some­where between half an hour and an hour (using an inter­est­ing lit­tle pro­gram called pzizz.) After that I was a bit groggy for a while, but did man­age to perk up and get a few things done. Next time I’m hav­ing a tired-out day, and I have the oppor­tu­nity, I’ll try to get nap­ping earlier.

I didn’t get around to med­i­tat­ing until the end of the day, so I fig­ured I’d try and med­i­tate in the same time and place I used to do at uni­veristy, i.e. lying down and in bed. You’d think this would just involve me going to sleep, but oddly it seemed to work back then. And last night, it was pretty fas­ci­nat­ing. There were two key things:

One was a dis­cov­ery of just how much ten­sion was built up in my body, and was stay­ing there even while I was lying down “relaxed”. My upper back, a usual source of dis­com­fort for me, felt like a clenched fist that I could barely con­trol. And I think this is actu­ally the nor­mal state. It’s only the med­i­ta­tion and pay­ing atten­tion that let me notice it.

The sec­ond was an expe­ri­ence that I used to get rea­son­ably reg­u­larly when I used to med­i­tate at uni­ver­sity, but haven’t expe­ri­ence since. A sen­sa­tion of fly­ing. Who knows, maybe I am falling asleep, and it’s a dream, or some form of hyp­n­a­gogic hal­lu­ci­na­tion. And it’s hard to describe. But basi­cally, it’s like a lucid dream where I don’t get to see much, but I feel like I’m fly­ing. It’s clos­est to, in Arthur Dent’s words, the act of throw­ing myself at the ground and miss­ing. A feel­ing of buoy­ancy, of float­ing in the air which I can actu­ally direct and con­trol, to fly for­wards across an unseen coun­try­side. It’s very cool. And last night it came back to me. Not for long, and I was a bit wob­bly, but I def­i­nitely expe­ri­enced it, and I believe I was con­scious rather than asleep, just in a state of otherness.

So, that was a very good end to a fairly crap day, and it’s pos­si­bly a sign of progress.

Sun­day: Today was a bet­ter day, and I did my med­i­ta­tion nice and early, stan­dard sitting-looking-at-candle stuff, and it worked pretty well. I still got dis­tracted here and there, but I found that, as with yes­ter­day, try­ing to be more aware of my own body as a whole seemed to help. Sim­ple aware­ness rather than thoughts, I reckon, has got to be an improvement.

And also, walk­ing to a café today, I felt the sud­den desire to stop the pod­cast I was lis­ten­ing to, take my iPod ear­buds out, and just walk. So I did. And I dropped into a fairly good walk­ing med­i­ta­tion pretty quickly. There were still thoughts, but I left them behind me quite well, and I felt very at ease with the world.

So, despite most of yes­ter­day being a bit of a write-off, the week­end has, on the whole, been pretty good.

Tomor­row I should be able to have a decent un-rushed ses­sion in the morn­ing, as I’ve taken the day off work. That’s because I have a course in the after­noon at the Folk House, a beginner’s guide to free­lance jour­nal­ism! This might well be exactly the right course at the right time for me…

Any­way. Bit of a marathon entry. I’ll try to keep it shorter tomorrow!

Day 20: Coming unblocked

The morn­ing med­i­ta­tion was inter­est­ing this morn­ing. I tried count­ing the breaths, which worked quite well for a while; I got as far as forty-something before my thoughts drifted for long enough to lose count. But it was a tried morn­ing; I think I drank cof­fee too late last night, and I had real trou­ble get­ting to sleep.

On the plus side, I man­aged to get some stuff done from my “To Do” list1, which I’ve been neglect­ing for far too long. Before I started the med­i­ta­tion, I’d cleared my “To Do” list of every­thing but writing-related stuff, essen­tial stuff, and some leisure stuff that shouldn’t dis­tract me too much. This dumped about three quar­ters of the things from the list into my “some­day I might get around to” file. How­ever, the remain­ing short­ened list has been sit­ting there solidly not being done for the best part of a month now.

Last night I did some stuff for the man­age­ment com­mit­tee at the flats, and I did all the stuff I’d been mean­ing to do with my per­sonal web­site, which is pretty much a com­plete rewrite. And I did it all in about three hours of pretty solid work, with some pretty good concentration.

Still no writ­ing of fic­tion, though, which is a prob­lem. If I want to get pub­lished, I’ve got to get writing.

Any­way. My din­ner just turned up (I’m writ­ing this in the bar/restaurant of Bristol’s Water­shed Arts Cen­tre) so I’d bet­ter pay atten­tion to eat­ing it!


1Which I keep on Nep­tune, a “Get­ting Things Done” style web service.