Whenever I come back to school after summer vacation, there's a period of time when I really can't study. There's just too much else going on that's more interesting! There are friends to visit with, and there are trees to walk under. There are bright colors outside, there are concerts to attend, and there are pints of Häagen-Dazs at the local 7-11. Why would I want to study? Of course I realize that I have to, and the longer this goes on the more worried I get. What if I can't make myself sit down and study ever again?
And then one day, it's as if I can feel a switch go click inside me. Suddenly all the bright colors wash out till they look like the reflection cast by fluorescent lights. Suddenly everything I eat or drink tastes like coffee. Suddenly I'm just not that interested in going out and exploring the city any more. And suddenly studying is the easiest thing in the world.
Of course I never meant this literally. My food didn't literally taste like coffee, and I didn't literally lose interest in visiting with my friends. But at a certain level of abstraction, it served as a useful "as-if." And there was indeed something interesting going on when that "switch" went click. There was something that happened that clearly separated the time when I could not focus on my studies, and the time when I could (so it seemed) do nothing else.
That was a long time ago. It has been a long time since I had to study like that—at any rate, since I had to study for months on end—and so the experience kind of faded away. I remembered the story, because I tend to remember stories well. But I wouldn't have identified it as part of my current experience.
But lately I've been trying to make some progress on the book I've told you about. The book that, as late as April, I said I hadn't touched in almost a year. Back in May I contacted someone who gave me a quote on development editing. At the beginning of June, not long before I left for the Ecosophian convention, I sent her a complete manuscript to work on. She sent it back, fully edited, a couple weeks ago—and asked for my feedback.
And what with one thing and another, I have been unable to look at it for more than a few minutes at a time.
Of course there are lots of Good Reasons. I have a regular schedule of blogging to maintain. I went to visit my mother for the Fourth of July. (Son1 and Dorcas visited as well, plus Brother and SIL. It was quite the event.) I had to do my laundry, and to buy groceries. Lots and lots of Good Reasons.
Yesterday, I wasted most of the day on Twitter. So today I told myself for sure that I had to work on reviewing my editor's changes. I sat down and forced myself. And even so, I kept getting distracted by the damnedest stuff. It must have been two hours after I made myself focus on the work, before I'd gotten more than a page or two into it.
And then after a while—"suddenly," as they say—I was deep inside the work and couldn't think about anything else. I got all the way to the end of it (using one review protocol), and then started over using a second. I got about a third of the way through before I decided to break for dinner. At this rate, I should finish (using the second review protocol) some time tomorrow.
When I first noticed that my distractability had evaporated, I was simply grateful.
Then I remembered the story I used to tell.
And I thought—maybe, just maybe, my daimon hasn't left me. Maybe he has just been resting. Maybe he is still there when I need him.
It makes for an exciting story.