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The Chelsea Writer's avatar

I have found that artistic pursuits totally unrelated to my writing life can be very satisfying ways to live in the moment. I first took up drawing at the City Lit. in London because I though it would be a way to spend time thinking about the book I was writing without the obligation to answer the phone or do something more physical. Not so. Drawing - really trying to draw well - took my total concentration. Hours passed without my thinking about anything else.

Eventually, my dissatisfaction with my limited skills and lack of progress led me to give up drawing. In 1975 I tried my hand at throwing pots on the wheel and I have never looked back. I've been going to art school in Richmond once a week since then. I'm surrounded by a generous and quietly companionable group of fellow potters. Once in a while I make a breakthrough and my skills are steadily improving - to the point that I have joined a studio and will be able to work on ceramics 20 hours a week. That activity requires intense concentration yet somehow frees my mind to think creatively. I highly recommend taking up a creative activity that - while it requires focused attention - does not demand the same kind of concentration that writing does.

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Charles Holdefer's avatar

Jennifer, this is a terrific essay. Wonderful prose and nuance.

I'm less well-travelled than you but my experience has been similar, trying to come to terms with different countries and the vagaries of city versus village life. Although it doesn't always work for me, sometimes what helps keep me present and anchored in the moment seems to revolve around food and food preparation, according to how it's circumscribed by local circumstance.

And, before typing this, I noticed the comment below, and it made me think of my writer friend Jesse Lee Kercheval. Maybe you've crossed paths with her? Sometimes it's a small world. In any event, after dedicating most of her adult life to writing prose and poetry, she found herself in Uruguay during the first Covid lockdowns, wondering what to do next, so she took up pencils and pads and began trying to draw, which she hadn't tried since she was a kid. Now, it seems, she can't stop. Here are a couple of readily available samples: https://fourthgenre.org/multimedia/body-is-a-vessel/ &

https://imagejournal.org/article/breasts/

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