Project Space, 4/09

April 6, 2011

 

 

this is my vow for now:

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cold storage

August 30, 2009

Every month it is painful to pay my Storage bill for stuff that grows increasingly vague in its specifics in Brooklyn. Paying for something you already own simply goes against the general evolutionary impulse. But until i can resolve this material snare by going to Brooklyn and reclaiming a minimal subset of these items and dispersing the rest, or by some kind of deus ex machina solution, the lag this task creates only compounds the offense

So I just did it, sent off the check. Each time, it requires moving through an almost physical resistance, in that way, somewhere between dreaming and waking when you try to move, and your limbs do not respond, or rather, all they are is their response, but with no effect. This time, it literally took me two weeks, first to address the envelope, and then today to assemble its contents and mail it. It seems like with these kinds of things, you just have to proceed, however slowly through them.

an ongoing list.  feel free to send your own!

1. Slow it down

The other day I had two deadlines for applications I felt I was taking a long time to complete. I decided to exaggerate the feeling of slowness further. And then, as is probably not a surprise, I finished them quickly. In doing them more slowly, I short-circuited all the work it was taking to have the constant stream of assessment of pace and then when that energy was freed up to do the actual work, everything came together readily.

Wherever you are, whenever it is 7:30 – 9:00 p.m. for you, during that time, should you undertake to turn your attention to what needs it, you will notice an intensified field of support, and if you are ready, you may find yourself finishing the tasks.

Heinous Task Wear, pt. 2

March 28, 2009

Would suiting up in any of the following help you reserve an airline ticket, or make an appointment with a pastry chef for a wedding cake tasting?

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I thought I’d look up what kinds of garments are available for difficult tasks, what garments might aid in approaching and completing tasks such as applying for a grant, reconciling multiple calendars, contesting an insurance claim.

When selecting a garment for sorting out old bills, or writing a living will, what are the attributes that might apply?

Should the garment be:

flame retardant?

anti-static?

Should it have:

high-visibility seams?

generous armholes?

underarm ventilation eyelets?

triple-taped seams?

a thermometer pocket?

Something made of resistance.

Something imagined to stand in the way of “my life” beginning.

A task that festers and gets bigger by not doing it.

A task that, when turned toward, becomes smaller.

For the dread they generate, heinous tasks are often not objectively difficult in proportion; often they can be done in less than a half-hour once the conditions have lined up. And the conditions do not have to line up perfectly. This is the most prominent snare, the belief in the perfect conditions. You can keep constructing those forever, conveniently never having to do the thing.

An archetypal example of this kind of heinous task, one that is relatively easy to execute, but that contains enormous psychic weight is making a sign to sell a car. This was the task a friend brought to the table one evening. She had been trying to do this for almost a year. As long as she didn’t make the sign she didn’t have to sell the car. As long as she didn’t have to sell the car, well you can see how this works…

Moving the marker across the paper such that it said the words For Sale, and then adding the pertinent details took roughly fifteen minutes to execute. A year to prepare for it, and fifteen minutes to actually make the sign.

Examples of tasks people have brought to the Heinous Task Table:

Completing an insurance application

sorting out receipts for taxes

writing a letter addressing an old conflict

making flight arrangements to visit ailing great uncle

Filling out a Do Not Resuscitate order

Heinous tasks often carry a valence of either near obsolescence or great uncertainty. So they might be rooted in the past in such a way that to do the task feels almost futile, as if the time has passed for it to matter, but it still feels necessary, as in writing up case notes, or sending back a pair of shoes that don’t fit. They are also speculative, for example writing a project statement. This projection forward can feel so indirect, it is easy to defer the task.

Some tasks can be traded. Others have to be done by the person, but maybe part of it can be delegated. Many heinous tasks can be broken down into 20-30-minute increments. Some cannot be done at a table, but perhaps moral support can be generated at the table, or someone at the table might offer on-site help. Sometimes knowing that someone else is aware that you’re working on the task can help provide the support needed to do it, so even if you are at home working on the task, it can be “registered” at the table.

It’s very interesting what happens when we turn our attention to these things we dread. When I have held heinous task nights, people inevitably come by and ask if we’re having a party. There is a general air of relief and play.