Sharing insights
Friday, 24th September 2021
All it takes is a click of the mouse and I’m off task. My heart cries out to be focused, self-disciplined and productive. Yet, when clarity escapes me, rather than face the whiteness of the page, I opt for entertainment. I lie to myself, thinking, “Just five minutes while I ponder how to continue.” I go to the solitaire website. Two hours and six games later, I’ve no closer to a fruitful outcome.
I don’t know what it is about being over 60 years old that allows me to become aware of my tendencies and automatic behaviors. Yet, I find that there are moments that I step outside myself and make keen observations. The most recent insight is that my initial determination to achieve a new goal lasts about three to four months. Curiosity, research, and discovery, keep me interested. As the mystery and mystique of a new skill are resolved, I find myself questioning how committed I want to be.
My “on again-off again relationship” with knitting is an example of this. Even as a young girl I wanted to know “old-fashion” skills. Since neither of my grandmothers and my mom didn’t knit, I began teaching myself to knit. Over the years I knitted a couple of sweaters, for people and dogs. Oh NO! Knitting is more than just casting stitches onto a needle. It required counting, marking, increasing, decreasing, and finally casting the pieces off the needles. That part was not enjoyable. I didn’t like big projects. I knit slowly, so it takes me a long time to finish projects.

Yet, I enjoy the rhythm of working the stitches and making something with my hands. I liked the “idea” of knitting, rather than actually becoming a truly accomplished knitter. These days, when I get a yen to knit, I cast 40 stitches onto a set of needles and knit a block. Eventually, the blocks get sewn together to make a blanket.
What I have come to understand is that my creative journey is a series of such indents. I begin projects with more curiosity than commitment. Once I understand the system of what I’m doing — I think I hit an over-saturation point. I put the unfinished project down. However, there is also within my make-up the need to return to that project and finish it. My first book was like that. Another project is a quilt I began in 2016. After a rest period, and the information has settled into my brain, the desire to see the project finished keeps drawing me back until I complete the unfinished business.
The purpose of this post is to share that when I disappear, that is when weeks or months pass between blog posts, I am usually taking some time off to get my bearings. Since I launched “Angelee’s Dilemma”, I have found myself floundering with the marketing part of this endeavor. I want things to be straightforward and easy. But experience has proven that I need to learn new skills, using several web tools that are interconnected. So, I took a few months off to try to determine what steps I need to take next.
Tim Grahl, Jeff Goins, Joseph Michael, and Rob Eagar are self-publishing mentors/coaches. According to them, a key element of selling books is developing an email subscribers list. A few years ago, I purchased Jeff Goins’s, Intentional Blogging course. Seeing as the course includes guidelines for growing an audience, I thought it was high time to actually access the course and implement the instruction. I hope it will help me overcome those feelings of being overwhelmed, uncertain of what I should be doing next.
It is my intention to send out a post each week—probably on Thursdays. From my past season, I know that this is possible.
It is also very possible that I will disappoint myself and you on occasion. Should that unfortunately happen, please bear with me and keep me in your prayers.
Serving Jesus, Author of our faith, Dalletta
3 Replies to “Sharing insights”
Well said for many of us, great intentions, but the flesh grows weary. Looking forward to more of your weekly blogs
I’m so far behind it’s not even funny. I’ve got Inktober 2021 coming up in a week and I’ve not finished last year’s challenge yet. I’ve been busy with other art projects, so it’s not like I’m totally playing Spider Solitaire all the time , but…
Let me pick up an oar, we’re in the same boat ??
Oh Dalletta: good to see your blog. It sounds like my life these days. Like a paper plate labeled “round tuit”… My latest addiction is a game called Mahjong Connect on FB. Well they say that each day presents the opportunity to begin again, or not. Love You, Friend