Thank you for the reminder about consistency trumping feeling. I've been thinking of quitting my Tuesday Pause poetry posts, after a break for holidays. But I had post-holiday stuff lined up, and really just need to get back into the routine of doing it once a week, since it's not that much work.
Your post also reminds me of the many craft-related books I keep buying but somehow never get far with. And I realise that it's just not time YET for many of them. I collect the material when I feel the drive, and even if I don't read / use it yet, I trust that at some point in future, they will come in handy. Just keep the door open...
In terms of reading, I saw "The Woman in Cabin 10" at a sale last year and was interested, but then the movie version just came out on Netflix, so I watched that. I started on the book sequel - "The Woman in Suite 11" (consistent titles, I guess) - a few days ago, and that's pretty decent so far. I wouldn't call myself a fan of thrillers, but they do seem to hold my interest.
Thank you for the reminder about consistency trumping feeling. I've been thinking of quitting my Tuesday Pause poetry posts, after a break for holidays. But I had post-holiday stuff lined up, and really just need to get back into the routine of doing it once a week, since it's not that much work.
Your post also reminds me of the many craft-related books I keep buying but somehow never get far with. And I realise that it's just not time YET for many of them. I collect the material when I feel the drive, and even if I don't read / use it yet, I trust that at some point in future, they will come in handy. Just keep the door open...
In terms of reading, I saw "The Woman in Cabin 10" at a sale last year and was interested, but then the movie version just came out on Netflix, so I watched that. I started on the book sequel - "The Woman in Suite 11" (consistent titles, I guess) - a few days ago, and that's pretty decent so far. I wouldn't call myself a fan of thrillers, but they do seem to hold my interest.
I appreciate this reflection so much Yacoob. There’s a lot of wisdom in trusting what’s “not yet” rather than forcing it.