Jamie

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Jamie’s Thoughts

 

Decision well made

Friday, April 15th, 2011

My 2nd cup of coffee isn’t so great this morning.

I don’t usually have a 2nd cup. The first one is just enough for me. Some weekends I treat myself to a 2nd cup, but there are very few mornings when I need a 2nd cup. I literally forced myself out of bed this morning, groggily shaking dreams out of my oh so sleepy head. Walking to the kitchen, I could hear my stomach growling, but staring at the pantry brought no revelations on breakfast. I normally eat first, then sit and enjoy my coffee. This morning, I could not even fathom the thought process of deciding what to eat and then the physical process of making it. I gave up and popped my Keurig cup into the brewer. After the caffeine began coursing through my veins, I was able to think a little clearer. Yet, I was still sleepy, and I decided on my 2nd cup.

Feeling a little more awake, I decided to grind coffee for my 2nd cup. The last time I had used my grinder was with my Christmas blend coffee that I am slowly working my way through. I knew I needed to wash the cinnamon and allspice out, but I didn’t have the energy. So a quick rinse and wipe was all I did. And now my coffee has a very vague aftertaste of spice; not a very good one either.

That’s why my 2nd cup of coffee isn’t so great. But I really don’t have enough energy to care. I intend to finish every drop of my mediocre cup.

In my extreme exhaustion, I’ve decided that the decision I made to not take the promotion at work was a wise one. I am pooped from the last three weeks since my boss left. I have a new boss who is wonderful. I feel comfortable working with her and she’s got tons of good ideas and fresh energy. She fits in with our staff beautifully. She is getting more comfortable in the position and is learning quickly.

I knew the first few weeks with her would be tiring, as she is learning the ropes. I knew I’d be picking up a lot of the slack and adding more responsibility to my work load. But I also know this will soon end. I am totally wiped and thus am so glad I didn’t take the position. Just having extra responsibility these past few weeks has been enough to show me that.

Bottoms up.

Writer’s Block

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

What do you do if you have a vision in your head of what you’d like to write but not a clear path of how to get it from head to paper?

What if your goal of waking up early for writing is being beaten down by exhaustion and allergies?

What happens when the creative flow of words that had been happening all of a sudden stops?

What happens when the “book” you’ve been trying to write turns into two?

What do you do when there is little motivation inside you?

How do you conjure up inspiration out of thin air?

I think I know the answer to most of these questions: keep writing. But why does that simple answer seem so difficult when you’re in the throes of writer’s block?

Singing

Monday, April 11th, 2011

There’s a book sitting on my nightstand that has been there for a couple of months. I am trying to get through it, because I’m the type that has to finish one book before starting another. I cannot pick up another book in good conscience without finishing the first. I have a list of other books that are in the to-read list, and I can’t get through them until I finish this book.

It’s not a bad book. It’s actually quite good, well written, with that poetic word phrasing woven throughout it’s sentences. It’s a book whose title drew me in. Plus, it was at a bookstore that was going out of business and I got it for like 10 cents. You can’t beat that.

Being the singer/musician that I am, titles like this make me look twice. I took it home. I’ve been reading books that inspire creativity and passion, in an effort to inspire my own creativity and passion. I figured this would be one of those books.

However, I have found it hard to get through. Not because it’s bad, but because it makes me feel like a bad singer. The book is filled with dramatic phrases on the beauty of melody and the life found within harmonious musical phrases. Singers can relate to that. We’re passionate, dramatic, and emotional.

For some reason, with this book, I find myself rolling my eyes at some of her phrases. She speaks of the life and the energy she gets from simple vocal warm ups and how her whole body resonates for the remainder of the day. I haven’t done a good vocal warm up in months. I hate to be reminded of that. It makes me feel lazy and uncommitted.

I love singing. I really do. It used to make me feel alive and on fire. Lately, it seems like a chore. People ask me to sing and I internally groan, thinking, “Do I have to?” Perhaps it’s simply because most of my singing lately has been at work, involving songs like, “Deep in the Heart of Texas,” and “She’ll Be Coming ‘Round the Mountain.” I long for songs with substance and words that speak to my heart. It’s been awhile since I’ve found a song like that. Perhaps that explains the sudden urge for songwriting again. I want to create a song that speaks to my heart, because it seems that songs like that are rare lately.

I try not to let things riddle me with guilt (like the WIii Fit, that felt the need to ask me yesterday if I realized it had been ten days since I had last used it. Shut up! I haven’t been feeling good! You’re not the boss of me!) but instead convict me subtly. I hope that I can let this book do that at least. Convict me to walk to the keyboard and attempt a few zing-a-mamas or mee-may-mah-moh-moos. Or at least a little humming in the shower. As a singer, I can at least do that much.

But I still hope I finish that book soon.

Fun with magnetic poetry

Saturday, April 9th, 2011

Just a portion of the words to choose from

 

Which ones to choose?

 

More choices…

 

Words I chose to work with

 

What I ended up with… random or poetic?