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I’m plucking up the courage to live the part in my heart that I’ve never dared to fully live
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I’m plucking up the courage to live the part in my heart that I’ve never dared to fully live

: on someday syndrome, changing how I live, the anti-productivity productivity idea, #9/24 new drawings (no birds), a new poem.

Melinda
Mar 4
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I’m plucking up the courage to live the part in my heart that I’ve never dared to fully live
hopemail.substack.com

HopeMail #133 | Twice a month on Fridays, I write and draw what’s on my mind lately about life, deriving insights from the ordinary mundane to the difficult days. This issue is the 9/24 new drawings for HopeMail. Counting down 15 more issues till we complete 24 new drawings in a year in October 2022.

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Previous issue #132 
Newsletter archive

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For all my adult life, I’m the type geared towards quadrants 1 and 2 of the Eisenhower matrix.
Task-based, outcome-driven, get it done.  

Image: an image of the Eisenhower matrix. 

Even when I ventured into an artistic career of writing and drawing in the past year, the work leaned heavier towards everything else. And less towards freely creating. 

I have a guilt-shame feeling about doing frivolous things such as creating and producing “nothing”.

Those can wait until the important priorities are done.

Excerpted from my previous post on taking your life back and regaining control of your life:

I went into this new everything within a year—drawing, business, shop, community—without giving myself enough space to freely create. And freely creating does not only constitute actively creating something. It is also in the space of nothingness, of not doing, that allows something to surface. 

I’m afraid that if I stop, I would fade into oblivion, that no one would read my writings, no one would buy my artwork, that I would not earn enough income to cover what I need.

Realising I have someday syndrome.

So, I’ve been waiting. 

I’ve been waiting for the freedom to not be measuring my time spent, with the results I’m producing. 😱 How could you not be making something out of it?!

I’ve been waiting—daily, for years, to complete the regular work tasks before, without guilt, I can take those drawing and painting classes I’ve been wanting to do, and other things too—solely because I’m interested in it. 😱 How could you waste time doing things just because?!

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Image: text divider. Handwritten word “new poem” and a black & white line drawing of a hand about to pick up something.

The audacity! of you

How dare you not live up to the expectations of others. those kinds of work, those kinds of results, those kinds of income, those kinds of things that people normally do.
How dare you not live up to the expectations of friends
of relatives
of strangers
of imaginary people, you have yet to meet.
How dare you not live up to the expectations
of you.

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It was only from a recent soul searching when I realised I will always be waiting, yearning for the above—because I’ve been waiting for the someday that would never come. For the courage to live that part in my heart that I’ve never dared to fully live. I’ve been waiting to give myself permission to stop waiting.

The soul searching made me realise I don’t want to wait anymore. 

“I’m turning someday into today.”

It might sound like an insignificant change to some people, but it’s huge for me.

I’m excited. Yet nervous! And I have zero track record in how to navigate this change I wanted. 

Then, a brilliant idea came—how about I reverse my regular schedule?

Since I’m defining this whatdoyoucallit as the thing I want to prioritise and not pushed aside, why don’t I do it first before my other tasks?

Here’s the first experiment I’m doing to tackle someday syndrome.

For a period (the length of time yet to be defined, maybe it should be left as such), I’ll reverse some of my day’s schedule.

Take a class first. 
Or sketch first.
Or draw first.
Or anything related to what I fancy; drawing or writing or dreaming.1
Focus on one main thing a day.
And then only move on to one to three more tasks I classify as necessities to get things moving.

I know. Revolutionary, right?

It’s a rebellion against what I’ve been taught in productivity. Which usually tells us to tackle the hardest work first. 

But, my friends, after I’ve tackled the hardest work first (writing things to be published is hard work. Enjoyable, but hard work), I’m left with leftover end-of-the-day strength and focus. I’m physically and mentally tired. Take an art class? Sorry. Maybe an ice-cold beer. Ok, ok, kombucha for you health buffs.

Image: gif of a sleepy and tired monkey yawning and rubbing its eyes.
coffee, please.

Documenting the experiment.

Maybe I’m on to something. 
Or nothing!
But, I think it’s too precious to not document the new experience. 

I deliberated between a few available platforms to document this journey:
start a new newsletter?
start an opt-in only section in the HopeMail newsletter?
revive my WordPress blog?
restart Tumblr?
post on Instagram?
jot down in Apple notes?

And got stressed with the choices. Finally, I overcame the analysis paralysis with another revolutionary idea.

Tadah! 

Image: a photo of a black and white comic illustration and words taken from my notebook. It shows me as the comic character, seated on a log, eyes looking mischievously sideward, somewhat thinking about something. The capital letters formed the word, LOG, pointing to the tree log, and also pointing to me (also, log), haha. The words on the page read: documenting this whatdoyoucallit phase where I explore, roam, learn, experiment, create, do nothing, do anything, back to doing nothing, dawdle (WORD OF THE YEAR, Y’ALL); be.   There’s a cheeky bee with the word bubble, “you called?” Referring to the word, “be’. It’s dated 15 February 2022, the day I started the notebook.   On the bottom right corner of the notebook, there’s a random, funny illustration of me peeking out from the notebook with both of my hands flinging out sideways, and I said child-likely, “Look, ma! No hands!” 
look, ma! it’s a notebook!

I got a good old paper notebook to document my journey and learnings. And will figure out the “should I share and where to share part” later. Stay tuned, maybe?

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Image: text divider. Handwritten word “ pause and ponder” and a black & white line drawing of two hands of supposedly God and Adam, with one finger from each hand reaching out to each other. This drawing is my rendition, mimicking the popular artwork of Michelangelo’s The Creation of Adam.
image: a quote "Someday is right now. What have you been postponing?" with a black and white line drawing of a bird flying off from its nest.
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Image: text divider. Handwritten word “ new drawing” and a black & white line drawing of a hand holding a compass, drawing a circle.

Maggie or is it, Mr Monitor?

Image: a black and white line drawing of a medium-sized monitor lizard lounging horizontally on a chunky tree trunk, with some leaves at the top left and bottom corner of the drawing. The monitor lizard has a darker shade of vertical stripes across its body.
Maggie or is it, Mr Monitor #24drawingsforhopemail 

This is the resident monitor lizard around our housing area. On an almost daily basis, Mr Monitor (or “how do you know it’s a Mister and not a Maggie?”, asked my husband) will climb up the same tree. To do nothing—in my eyes.

From afar, it looks like a pasty grey coloured thing. But I would use the binocular and be able to ogle at the pattern of its reptilian skin. Hmm. Interesting, I thought. 
And I drew Maggie or is it, Mr Monitor.

Here’s a 40 seconds video of Maggie or Mr Monitor climbing up the tree.


That’s all for now, folks. Thanks for reading. Hope you’ve enjoyed reading this issue of HopeMail. By the way, if you’d like to discover some newsletters based on your interest, check out these two newsletter discovery tools I’m currently using, The Sample and Refind. This is how some of you found my newsletter too, yay! ☺️

Leaving you with some lovely words for your soul.

Dawdle
Meander
Slower
Linger

💖 Melinda

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Image: text divider. Handwritten word “fund my work” and a black & white line drawing of little girl with a happy smile, running gleefully across a field, holding a ballon.

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If you’ve benefited from HopeMail, help me to keep writing, keep publishing and keep going with a flexible paid subscription. You can increase, decrease, and pause your payment at any time with any amount you like. Or you can say thanks by leaving a tip. Thanks for saying thanks! ☺️

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1

I was staring and staring at the lovely illustrations of E.H. Shepard; my heart bursting out in delight after delight.

A fantastic video on The art of E. H. Shepard, written and narrated by Pete Beard.

Pete Beard wrote:
When I first started teaching illustration I was shocked when I realised that quite a few of the students thought that Winnie the Pooh was a Disney creation. Sadly, that was the version they had grown up with. This is a tribute to Ernest Shepard, the visual originator of Winnie the Pooh, and an illustrator with a remarkable body of other work lasting the best part of seven decades.

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Nithya Subramanian
Writes Show and Tell ·Mar 9Liked by Melinda

This was so lovely and soothing to read Melinda. Thank you!

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1 reply by Melinda
Karen Davis
Writes Life in the Real World ·Mar 5Liked by Melinda

This is really great, thank you.

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