Inception and Exorcisms

Out!

I have found that if I have an idea, it will keep swirling around my brain unless I get it out in some way.  In a way, I’m exorcising myself to prevent these ideas from plaguing me further.  It’s not so bad having ideas pile up in my brain, it’s just that as long as they’re floating around, I’m not able to adequately devote sufficient brain cycles to other tasks.  I don’t know the reason for this – but my sense is that my brain will keep returning to these ideas, circulating and cycling them, because I don’t want to forget about them – and it can only truly relax once it knows the idea is somewhere it can’t be lost / forgotten.

A while back I had suggested the only good way I had to deal with these recirculating ideas was to either act on them (building / blogging) or killing them (organizing / bookmarking).  This wasn’t exactly true.

But, first, a digression.  Many years ago Bre Pettis and Kio Stark created a “cult of done” manifesto, a short set of ideas about how to consider things “done,” written in 20 minutes since that’s all the time they had to write it.  I think about this manifesto and this one particular poster implementation of it often.

James Provost’s Cult of Done Poster

I’m not sure what appeals to me so much about this manifesto.  I don’t know that I agree with each element – but for something generated in 20 minutes, it’s pretty good.  I guess the reason it comes back to my mind today, of all days, is that I happened to be looking back through my many blog posts with my eldest kiddo and was reminded of all the blogging I did here and at MakerBot.com and was reminded of those earlier, perhaps simpler and sillier, times.

Here’s how I actually exorcise / done-ify things:

  • Build the idea
  • Blog (and publish) the idea
  • Bookmark the page and sort that bookmark
  • Write the idea down in a note app
  • Write it down or sketch it in a notebook / sketchbook
  • Send the idea to someone

Sometimes I can accidentally let years go by without talking to a friend.  It’s not a good quality – but at least I’m able to recognize this personality trait.  My way of keeping in touch with people is that when I see something that reminds me of them, I’ll send it to them.  This isn’t so unusual … but sometimes I do this same thing with a slightly less pure motive.  Sometimes when I have an idea or see something interesting, I don’t just store it in a bookmark or by writing it down… I consciously make an effort to store it in a friend’s brain.

Yes, I’m sharing a thing with a friend as a way to connect, offer something to them that I know they’ll be interested in, perhaps to give us something to talk about, but I admit that I also consciously share it with them in order to further store the same data within their brain and in our communication channels.1 Again, not my finest quality, but it’s not an entirely selfish quality either.2  The hilarious thing about this last way to done-ify something is that you could even store the data in the brain of someone you hated!  Heck, you could rage-tweet it to someone.  And, the stronger your reaction to them, the stronger the connection you would have to the memory of the thing!

Taking all that into consideration, here’s how I probably actually exorcise / done-ify things:

  • Implement: Build the idea
  • Externalize:  Publish the idea
  • Memorialize:  Write down, bookmark, sketch,
  • Incept:  Store the idea in someone else’s brain
  1. Texting, messaging apps []
  2. Though, I suppose “not entirely selfish” isn’t exactly a resounding exoneration. []

On Sketching

On a slightly wistful note, Kathleen Jennings’ simple, elegant, and evocative sketches make me miss sketching.  Once upon a time, a long long time ago, I would carry an analog notebook everywhere and sketch in pen and ink, my favorite media.

I still sketch occasionally, my most amusing sketches are now done at the behest of my daughter.

  • Draw me a sea lion!  So, I draw a lion wearing a SCUBA tank, mask, and flippers
  • Draw me a unicorn hula hooping!  So, I do.
  • Draw me a penguin, Mary Poppins, and Santa!  So, I do.
  • Draw me a cuttle fish!  So, I do.
  • Now a Lizard Wizard Library!  A castle!  These commands I obey as well.

Ah!  But, now the mood has struck!  I also find that my sketches that I appreciate the most are ones that are totally off the cuff.  Just pen, paper, and 30 seconds to draw something before my daughter’s attention fades. 1  We have a few of these little sketches framed around our home.

One of my favorites that is not framed was also inspired by my daughter.  I think I was teasing her about something, suggesting she was too good smelling to do something or other.  She insisted she was smelly.  I insisted she was not.  She said, again, she was and that she was rolling with the pigs.  You see, when you’re 3 years old the smelliest dirtiest thing you can conceive of is a pig rolling in mud.   The resulting sketch is of my daughter in what appears to be a sedan/SUV with several pigs, all of them wearing sunglasses, with her driving – as she rolls with the pigs.

I like to think she gets her artistic tendencies from me.  She probably colors something on the order of 20 sheets of paper a day in drawings.  Markers, crayons, and color pencils.  It’s pretty amazing to come home and find pages and pages of new artwork every day.  What’s more, there’s always a story to go with each picture.

I tend to sketch a lot more on vacation.  I’ll actually dust off a sketchbook to take with me and sketch things I see while out and about.  I have several pages devoted to the grad school road trip out to Las Vegas and New Mexico with my roommate.  It features the Grand Canyon, random exit signs, people we met, scenes and sunsets.  I have more pages devoted to a Mexican cruise from about six years ago filled with funny inside jokes and bits about the funny people we met.

Almost totally off topic, but while I’m in a sharing mood – tonight I kept my daughter entertained for about 15 solid minutes with several dozen variations of card tricks based on three slight of hand maneuvers.  The best part is she really and truly believes I taught her magic. 2  I put the deck in front of her and let her knock on it with her hand and tell me where the Ace of Spaces was supposed to be – the top, middle, or bottom of the deck.  And, wherever she said, that’s where it always was.

  1. I don’t mean to blame her for this – she get it from me.  And, really, my attention span is considerably shorter []
  2. Don’t worry, I’ll fill her in later []