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  1. "Of course, you and I can be addicted to any number of things - to love, to sex, to worship of our children or our parents, to dominance, to submission. We can even be addicted to ourselves (see Charlie Sheen, Donald Trump). Such individuals can be absolutely fascinating at the same time as they're boring as hell."

    #StevenPressfield, Going Pro, 2012

    #books #NonFiction #addiction

  2. Between the two

    Most of us have two lives. The life we live, and the unlived life within us. Between the two stands Resistance.

    ~ Steven Pressfield, from Writing Wednesdays: The Unlived Life

    slip:4usete24.

    For me there’s a huge tension between those two. I see so many things that I want to do—and I don’t mean binge-watch TV shows. I imagine something I’d like to write—for example, a weekly, emailed publication for paying subscribers—and the complexity of creating it overwhelms me. The writing is the easy part; Or, am I deluding myself? The only salve I’ve found is to remind myself over and over and over that I consistently overestimate what I can get done in a day, and underestimate what I can get done in a lifetime.

    ɕ

    #Creativity #StevenPressfield

  3. Don’t stand in the shade

    Remember we employed a visual to help us understand this. We said that the Dream is like a tree in the middle of a sunny meadow. The tree casts a shadow.

    ~ Steven Pressfield, from Writing Wednesdays: Gotta Do It

    slip:4usego2.

    I find Pressfield’s metaphor to be striking. The tree in the meadow casts a real shadow. I was struck by the layers in this metaphor: light and darkness, the singular clarity of lone tree in an open space as a symbol of a life’s purpose, the proportional relationship of the larger the tree the larger and darker the shadow, and that one’s ability to avoid or at least escape the shadow is a choice we make.

    By extension then, if one attempts to nurture multiple callings, visions or projects, one has multiple big trees. That’s at least a copse of trees whose shadows merge together creating something much more significant to avoid or escape from.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #Creativity #OnWriting #StevenPressfield

  4. The real fear

    These are serious fears. But they’re not the real fear. Not the Master Fear, the Mother of all Fears that’s so close to us that even when we verbalize it we don’t believe it. Fear That We Will Succeed. That we can access the powers we secretly know we possess. That we can become the person we sense in our hearts we truly are.

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1527.

    #Creativity #Fear #InspirationalQuotesBookSelected_ #OnWriting #Quotes #StevenPressfield

  5. "I woke up the next morning in a motel room, by myself, in the same clothes I had been wearing the night before, with an empty quart of Jim Beam on the bedstand beside me.

    Why that time was different from any of a hundred times before, I don't know. But as I was staring at my reflection in the bathroom mirror, I heard my own voice say, 'that's enough, darling. This shit has got to stop'."

    Ms X. In Bakersfield, recounted by #StevenPressfield in Going Pro, 2012

    #GoingPro

  6. Who was listening

    […] so the Muse whispered in Beethoven’s ear. Maybe she hummed a few bars into a million other ears. But no one else heard her. Only Beethoven got it.

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1522.

    #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed_ #Quotes #StevenPressfield

  7. I'm rereading Going Pro by Steven Pressfield. It's one of those slim little books I always find both entertaining and insightful.

    "All addictions share, among others, two primary qualities.

    1. They embody repetition without progress.

    2. They produce incapacity as a payoff."

    #StevenPressfield, #GoingPro, 2012

    #books #writing #professionalism

  8. Professionalism

    The essence of professionalism is the focus upon the work and its demands, while we are doing it, to the exclusion of all else. The ancient Spartans schooled themselves to regard the enemy, any enemy, as nameless and faceless. In other words, they believed that if they did their work, no force on Earth could stand against them.

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1517.

    #BeingProfessional #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed_ #Quotes #StevenPressfield

  9. Overcoming fear

    The amateur believes he must first overcome his fear; Then he can do his work. The professional knows that fear can never be overcome. He knows there is no such thing as a fearless warrior or a dread-free artist.

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1512.

    #BeingProfessional #Fear #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed_ #Quotes #Resistance #StevenPressfield

  10. The professional

    In my view, the amateur does not love the game enough. If he did, he would not pursue it as a sideline, distinct from his “real” vocation. The professional loves it so much he dedicates his life to it. He commits full-time. That’s what I mean when I say turning Pro. Resistance hates it when we turn Pro.

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1507.

    #BeingProfessional #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed_ #Quotes #StevenPressfield

  11. Grandiose fantasies

    Grandiose fantasies are a symptom of Resistance. They’re the sign of an amateur. The professional has learned that success, like happiness, comes as a by-product of work. The professional concentrates on the work and allows rewards to come or not com, whatever they like.

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1502.

    #BeingProfessional #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed_ #Quotes #Resistance #StevenPressfield

  12. Self-realized

    Individuals who are realized in their own lives almost never criticize others. If they speak at all, it is to offer encouragement. Watch yourself. Of all the manifestations of Resistance, most only harm ourselves. Criticism and cruelty harm others as well.

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1497.

    #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed_ #Quotes #Resistance #StevenPressfield

  13. Procrastination

    Procrastination is the most common manifestation of Resistance because it’s the easiest to rationalize. We don’t tell ourselves, “I’m never going to write my symphony.” Instead we say, “I’m going to write my symphony; I’m just going to start tomorrow.”

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1492.

    #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed_ #Quotes #Resistance #StevenPressfield

  14. The warrior and the artist

    […] fear doesn’t go away. The warrior and the artist live by the same code of necessity, which dictates that the battle must be fought anew every day.

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1487.

    #Creativity #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed_ #Quotes #StevenPressfield

  15. A repelling force

    Resistance cannot be seen, touched, heard, or smelled. But it can be felt. We experience it as an energy field radiating from a work-in-potential. It’s a repelling force. It’s negative. Its aim is to shove us away, distract us, prevent us from doing our work.

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1482.

    #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed_ #Quotes #Resistance #StevenPressfield

  16. Sit down

    There’s a secret that real writers know that wannabe writers don’t, and the secret is this: It’s not the writing that’s hard. What’s hard is sitting down to write. What keeps us from sitting down is resistance.

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1477.

    #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed_ #OnWriting #Quotes #StevenPressfield

  17. After reading the first “book” in Steven Pressfield’s The War of Art, I’m inspired to define, for me specifically: What is “the work?”

    In a specific moment, on a specific day, when I feel that odd uneasiness, I will not try to identify the specific form Resistance is taking. Instead as Pressfield mentions on page 12:

    […] We can use this. We can use it as a compass. We can navigate by Resistance, letting it guide us to that calling or action that we must follow before all others.

    Rule of thumb: The more important a call or action is to our soul’s evolution, the more Resistance we will feel toward pursuing it.

    As a real example of my own experience, Resistance’s compass guides me towards watching sci-fi entertainment (“a harmless relaxation,” I think after working in my yard for hours). So the opposite would be to… organize and streamline my writing environment and processes so tomorrow I can write more easily! No. My hiding in preparation and perfection is just another form of Resistance.

    The best way for me is to look at all the possible things I could do, rather than follow Resistance’s compass. Then boil that down to a list of positive, actionable, directions in which I can sit down and work.

    In a specific moment, on a specific day, when I feel that odd uneasiness, I can glance at my list and simply do a bit of The Work.

    To defeat Resistance I can simply sit down, and do a little bit of any of the following…

    • do guest outreach for podcasting
    • write the next issue of 7 for Sunday
    • write the next Open + Curious article
    • write new blog posts

    ɕ

    PS: I’ve listed “do guest outreach” because—for me—once I do that consistently for a few weeks, all the rest of the podcasting process follows automatically.

    https://constantine.name/2024/10/12/the-work/

    #Books #Resistance #StevenPressfield

  18. Overcoming Resistance

    How many pages have I produced? I don’t care. Are they any good? I don’t even think about it. All that matters is I’ve put in my time and hit it with all I’ve got. All that counts is that, for this day, for this session, I have overcome Resistance.

    ~ Steven Pressfield

    slip:4a1472.

    #InspirationalQuotesBookReviewed_ #Quotes #StevenPressfield

  19. Writer’s voice

    The writer’s voice casts a spell. The right voice makes the work accessible; it gives us the tone and point of view that best illuminate the material and make it shine. The magic of Hemingway’s prose is that it describes events the way the human eye sees them. He taught himself this technique as a journalist and he used it very consciously and deliberately.

    ~ Steven Pressfield, from Writing Wednesdays: The Writer’s Voice

    slip:4usete17.

    The question I’m left with, not specifically from this piece from Pressfield but just in general, is: Is it better to simply write what one feels drawn to write, and to then literally discover—as in, “oh, surprise, so that’s my writer’s voice”—or intentionally seek it out through planned discovery? Because it sure seems that different writers find their voices in different ways. Unfortunately, all I have here is the question. I’m not even sure if it’s really a dichotomy. Maybe it only seems to me, to be a choice. I’m on the “I dunno I’ll just try writing” discovery path. Maybe the other path wouldn’t work for me… maybe if I tried to be more intentional about finding my voice . . . maybe I’d just end up realizing that’s not actually a path to finding my voice.

    ɕ

    #OnWriting #StevenPressfield

  20. How do you finish with it?

    Was the project worthy of us? Was it ours alone, in the sense that we were writing from our own gift … and in the face of our own fears? Did we live up to the goddess’s expectations of us? Did we live up to our own? Did we give it all we had?

    There are no spotlights in the writer’s life. There’s no moment of acclamation as we tap in a putt on the 72nd green. Our moment is private. When I wrap a book, a lot of times I won’t even tell anybody.

    This is self-evaluation. Self-reinforcement. Self-validation.

    ~ Steven Pressfield from, Writing Wednesdays: Finishing

    slip:4usefi1.

    As usual, Pressfield is talking about writing and writers. But it made me think about how I finish with an episode…

    It occurs to me that the very last things I do, are social media posts, and usual a final “hey thanks, it’s published” to the guest. I’m left [after reading pressfield’s post] wondering if I could re-imagine being done to be something I enjoy… some way to put a positive “done!” on the end.

    What might that be? …maybe I print a copy of the episode notes and put it on a pile, or in a binder. …or some other way to create a visible “there’s the stuff that’s done!”

    ɕ

    #OnWriting #StevenPressfield

  21. Resistance

    Opinions are strongly divided about Pressfield’s concept of Resistance. And yes, some days I do find myself over in the Resistance-is-bullshit encampment thinking: No, Resistance is not real. It is important and meaningful for me to be spending my time rearranging these deck chairs, polishing this silverware, sorting these shelved books, getting the edge of my lawn just so, tagging and organizing all these blog posts… And then, “Curse you, Resistance!!

    For myself, I was years into the act of having a practice before I even thought about its efficacy as a strategy to overcome my own Resistance. Resistance was (and is) a given for me. It wakes up with me. I know I will have to face it every day, and I know it will never diminish or relent or go away.

    ~ Steven Pressfield from, A Practice and Resistance

    slip:4useaa1.

    I’ve been looking for a word to replace “professional” in my regular usage. (Please hit reply if you’ve got one.) I’ve given up on changing how others perceive the words I say; People take professional to first refer to getting paid for one’s efforts. But by professional I mean—and this is the way Pressfield uses the word—competent, skilled, assured, and approaching mastery. Steve Martin is talking about that sort of professionalism, not about money, when he says, “be so good they can’t ignore you.”

    Why do I care? Because with the concept of getting paid pushed aside, then professionalism can be used as a razor for cutting through resistance. I simply consider my practices (left for another day is the discussion of whether or not it works to have more than one practice) and ask the question: Would a professional do this?

    Yes, a professional would take time off for this restorative activity. No, a professional would just ignore these deck chairs. Yes, a professional would spend 3 days writing software tooling so 10 years from now this stuff is still organized and useful. No, a professional would not stoop to that level. Yes, a professional would totally get this part pitch perfect.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #BeingProfesional #Process #StevenPressfield

  22. Onward

    Be sure that you’ve first fully assimilated the idea of ‘no’, above. For if you don’t, you risk the mistake I make of reflexively saying ‘yes’ to the next thing that comes up.

    We do it because to stop (or pause) after Project number-1 means we are one-hit wonders. We are dabbling. We are amateurs.

    To continue, on the other hand, means we are pursuing our calling as a practice.

    ~ Steven Pressfield from, Having a Practice

    slip:4useha1.

    We do, in fact, want to—we must—say ‘yes’ to some next thing.

    First, master the wonderful, short, complete sentence: No. Second, immediately say yes to the correct, next thing.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #Creativity #StevenPressfield

  23. Always be starting

    Am I too often seeking the sense of safety or control? (And it is indeed only a sense-of. It is only an illusion.) What happened to the simple feeling of joy in being?

    What this means, as I understand it, is that when we let go of all attachment to the outcome of our novel publication/album release/opening of our Thai Fusion restaurant … we shift the locus of our enterprise from the ego to the Self (or the soul if you prefer.)

    The Muse likes this. Heaven likes this.

    We are now operating on the plane of the soul, not the plane of the ego.

    ~ Steven Pressfield from, “Start the next one today”

    slip:4usesa1.

    Sometimes an outcome is important; the measurements, the color, the specific dimensions. When the idea began with the intention of trading the outcome with another. But not every waking moment. Too much of that is obviously an imbalance.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #Creativity #OnWriting #StevenPressfield

  24. Honka! Honka!

    Godin’s writing frequently—it might be fair to say always—attempts to inspire. But from some quarters he is criticized for being too trite; that he speaks in platitudes.

    No need to be part of the circus. If you can find a problem and solve it, you can skip the clown car.

    ~ Seth Godin from, Turtleneck confusion

    slip:4usetu2.

    Two points: First, the problem with platitudes lies with the listener; if I’ve heard it so often, that it feels like a platitude, then why have I still not yet embodied the lesson? Second, Godin doesn’t get enough credit for his efforts to teach professionalism; and professionalism has nothing to do with getting paid (c.f. Steven Pressfield.)

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #BeingProfesional #Marketing #SethGodin #StevenPressfield

  25. “Why are artists often so surprisingly humble? Because they know, despite the seeming magic they produce, (and the effect it has upon their audience or their readers) that they are not the source. They are only the vessel, the pipeline.”

    #books #StevenPressfield

    — The Daily Pressfield: A Teaching a Day from the Author of the War of Art by Steven Pressfield
    a.co/4T6Hgjp

  26. It’s resistance

    In the most recent months I’ve been waking up with this strange sensation. In the Fall I started deleting things; I started changing projects to require less input, simplifying where I could, and in some cases outright eliminating. Whereas in recent years I’ve generally awakened with a sense of “should”—I should do this, I should have yesterday done that—in the most recent months I’ve awakened with this strange sensation. It’s not optimism per se, but it’s close. What do I want to do today? …do that.

    Hovering before me as I wake is the work I know I need to do that day. Inevitably, that labor is daunting. Inescapably, it brings up fear. I don’t want to do it. This fear and this avoidance combine to create the witch’s brew that boils and bubbles in the cauldron of my brain.

    ~ Steven Pressfield from, My Head in the Morning

    slip:4usemy1.

    In the Age of Fire I continuously expanded what I wanted to do, beyond the bounds of possibility and reason. Lately, having realized that nothing I do actually matters, I’m free—I’ve always been free—to pick a few nice things upon which to apply myself.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #Resistance #StevenPressfield

  27. Part two

    It’s time to accept that I’m definitely in part two of my life. I’m done pretending that living to 100 is realistic. (Although, I’m open to being surprised.)

    Now on my Artist’s Journey I barely drive to the grocery store.

    ~ Steven Pressfield from, Writing Wednesdays: After the Wilderness

    slip:4useae2.

    The thought rattling around in my head is: What are the differences between parts one and two? And I think the central thematic difference is activity versus passivity. In part one the hero expended tremendous effort bashing their way towards the objective. In part two the hero has realized it’s time to play a supporting role.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #AgeOfAir #LifeBalance #StevenPressfield

  28. One’s Way
    “The important thing is never to let oneself be guided by the opinion of one's contemporaries; to continue steadfastly on one's way without letting oneself be either defeated by failure or diverted by applause.” — Gustav Mahler

    Gustav Mahler was an Austrian composer who's work is familiar to us whether we know it or not. His Sy
    alexandersmap.com/2023/01/14/o
    #PersonalGrowth #Art #Habits #History #Music #Productivity #Writing #GustavMahler #StevenPressfield

  29. This Is the Way
    "I believe that above the entire human race is one super-angel, crying "Evolve! Evolve!" Angels are like muses. They know stuff we don't. They want to help us. They're on the other side of a pane of glass, shouting to get our attention. But we can't hear them. We're too distracted by our own nonsense. Ah, but when we begin….we get out of our own way and al
    alexandersmap.com/2022/12/02/t
    #Writing #Art #Habits #Learning #Productivity #StevenPressfield