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Amanda B. Hinton's avatar

I relate on a lot of levels to this tension, this being pulled in so many directions. For years I followed all the advice about setting goals and measuring progress and data this, analytics that. And all those inputs created a kind of blinding vortex where I would work, grinding myself into a pulp just to get to the outcome I said I wanted. It's no wonder I burned out over and over again. The needle was moving all the time, for one thing (very maddening effect that has). And none of this goal setting ever considered ME in the process. I had no real awareness that I was torturing myself until it was way too late (autism makes "registration" of pain really tricky/elusive).

So the fact that you can see the tension and acknowledge it and relate differently because of it — that's basically the whole ball game, as far as I'm concerned. Of course then that leaves us with, "What do we focus on instead if not the numbers, the end goal?" I suppose it's different for everyone, but for me, I try to really sink into the felt sense of every day.

Did my day have the qualities I value, like relaxation, creative excitement, relational connection? If so, then I met my goals. If not, then time to re-evaluate. And I TRY TO only occasionally touch in with the numbers (this is very hard) and imagine some creative tweaks here and there to try to get my writing into new readers' hands. (The numbers are still very sparkly... you can't NOT see them, but I do try to resist the web they cast.) Anyways, long way of saying, I hear you and you're doing great.

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Brian Dolinar's avatar

Love it! Keep writing! BD

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