Every Day is a Perfect Day - Living the Perfect Routine - Part 2

in #life7 years ago (edited)

This is a bit of a #ulog about my daily routine.

I realized the other day that I could pretty much write one journal entry that would cover my entire year - my routine has become that entrenched. Part 1 is here.

That's not to say it's particularly interesting. But since this is the first period of my life in which I really enjoy where I'm going every day, I figured it was worth sharing - or at least worth celebrating for myself.

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I wake naturally at 5. The alarm is set for 6 but I haven't needed it in months. Check the time on my phone. Try not to get embroiled/distracted by messages on Steemit. Fail a little. Stand, walk. Pour coffee. Pack pipe.

Sit down in my office and write for an hour or two. Longhand. Watch the beginning of the sunrise. In a few weeks, as the days lengthen, I’ll be watching the end of the sunrise at this hour. Watch the way the pipe smoke bellows and traces shifting landscapes beneath the shade of the desk lamp. Attempt to launch a smoke ring towards the beam of light.

Wonder if I should attempt to write some fiction, or if just rambling in this journal is enough. (Enough for who?) A theory: if I do this for enough days I’ll get tired of writing about myself and will have to start telling stories out of sheer boredom. But after 42 years it’s looking unlikely that will ever happen. Maybe I’m just too much of a narcissist. Although it would be cool to emulate Trollope, who penned a shelf of lengthy novels in the early morning hours before his shifts at the post office.

I put down the pen at 7:00. This leaves exactly half an hour for the shit/shower/shave ritual. (Confession: I don’t always shower.) Dress and chat with the wife, who is in bed with the laptop making her rounds on Steemit. Also bring her a cup of coffee. Put on a tie, which isn’t required but is the quickest and easiest way to garner a certain baseline level of attention and respect from strangers in the day ahead. (Why don’t more people realize this? I walk out of the back room at work with a tie on and customers assume I’m the owner.)

Pack the second pipe of the day and head out to the car. On the 30 minute drive to the train station, listen to the music Spotify’s algorithm has selected for me this week - and if some artist seems particularly intriguing, delve deeper.

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Or I just savor the sounds of the car while I smoke: the hiss of the tires and the whistle of the wind past the cracked window, the baseline rumble of the engine getting louder as my muffler deteriorates.

If I’ve left myself enough time, I can take the back road, a rural route past homes, farmland, businesses, and old New England churches, and which is usually wreathed in fog and slanting sunlight at this hour.

Else - the highway, a sort of monotonous desert stretch where the cars feel stationary and the land passes underneath in a foreshortened dream, but which, in a way, leaves more empty mental space for contemplation. The mind wanders and sometimes inspiration strikes and I’m left with mental notes - the start of a post, something to write about - or more likely be forgotten.

Park at the station and walk to the rearmost car, which has been designated the “quiet car” - a tradition which is only loosely enforced by the conductors, but beloved by introverted misanthropes. Pay the parking charge with the app on my phone. Nod to the conductor as I show her my pass. Eat my breakfast of four hard boiled eggs sprinkled with salt and pepper.

Now comes the first major decision of the day: what to do with this precious hour of enforced idleness?

Read a book? Go on Steemit and catch up on posts? Write something of my own? Stare out the window?

It’s amazing how many options one has, sitting in a seat and rolling along at 60 miles per hour. One can’t be too structured in this life, so I leave the decision to whim and spontaneity. Once made, though, I do try to stick with it for the full hour’s ride. My day is chopped-up enough as it is, and I find that if I don’t give myself a chunk of time here and there to focus on just one thing, I’m left with a shattered, disconnected feeling - as if I haven’t lived through a day at all, but have simply been moved one step closer to the terminus of a game-board by some foreign hand.

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Once we arrive in the city we are presented with further choices: Ride the subway, or walk? And if walk, which route? Chinatown, or the shopping district?

Much depends on the season or the weather. Cold and rain favor an underground route, with the bonus of some additional people watching.

But on a clear day, walking the streets above offers the possibility of snatching a few photos. And I can stop for a few minutes at the antiquarian bookseller, where they roll out their offerings into a parking lot, $3 a book in the open air, and where I always find something I’d like to read someday.

But never make a purchase, because I don’t know where I’d put any more books. Browsing is enough.


Stay tuned for part 3 tomorrow (probably) in which we actually get some work done (more or less.)


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Crikey and that's just the morning? Do you actually do a day job too?

Nothing wrong with a stable routine. I'm sure I'm more productive when I just stick to mine religiously, and yr right, there's plenty of little variations along the way!

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Yeah, the day job part's coming tomorrow. It's hard to fit an entire day into one day, if you know what I mean.

The grass is always greener... I sometimes wish I had a stable routine! As a freelancer I hate that I have to plan out the coming month of babysitting at weird and irregular times and that if I don't read my calender properly... I end up. In the wrong place at the wrong time...

I don't think I'd like the unpredictability of that kind of life. I used to think I wanted that, but part of the reason I'm happy now is that I've accepted I like doing the same thing every day.

I admire anyone who can pull it off, though. And with kids too - that takes some superpower level of planning and preparation!

Well... it is a lot of planning ahead... especially when you live on the other side of the planet to the grandparents. Still, it is possible... if a touch draining at times!

Only a writer of certain abilities could make the mundane morning commute a thing of rapt attention and joy of the written word. I so enjoyed this read, as I do of most of yours. Do you write all your works longhand first? Then type them out? (I know you are a large fan of the clickity-clack machine...of the desk set, not to be confused with the steel centipede of travel you take to work.) I'm much more of a fly by the seat of your britches sort of creator. All on keyboard. Though I fear that is more an aspect of how I attack all of life. Having a life of routine certainly would be helpful in life, and a way to accomplish things with efficiency. Large Sigh of lack of organization skills and followthrough. Oh well, it sort of works ( :

I love that your area of writing at Toad Hall is the perfect sanctuary for the mind and creative spirit. And what a view. Particularly in the early AM quiet, before the rest of the world is stirring. Very peaceful and no doubt creatively stimulating indeed. I've always envied folks too who can think creatively on a train or in a coffee shop, as DDA often does too. My brain bings around too much to focus, with all that stimulation. Great ideas spring forth for the impetus of a project in those environs, but follow through, forget it. Has to be a quiet room. I look forward to your next piece on the 'day of work'. Your job must be rather fascinating, with all the characters that come and go downtown. A writer's paradise of brainfodder. Thanks again for a great read, and cheers to a nice Saturday.

Thanks for the thoughtful comment.

I go through phases where I do most of my drafting longhand. The pace of it seems to match the rate my brain works, if that makes sense. At the computer I'll type a couple of sentences, then pause while I think about the next thing - and that's where distraction sets in, with every web-site, video game and electronic notification just a click away. With pen and paper my hand seems to keep moving at a steady pace, and the pages fill up a lot faster.

I haven't fiddled about with the typewriters in a while. I may bring them out again but for now pen-to-computer seems to be working well.

"The Steel Centipede" is a great phrase. I might have to borrow that...

Calls to mind some classic Jack Vance:

Well @winstonalden a sneeky little morning post eh?

Yes we are creatures of habit aren't we. I think maybe your love of your current pattern is also hardwired from your going to traditional school where your days were divided into things, a bell go to next thing, home bed, rinse repeat. I guess those early year hard wirings are more set in the ole' brain than we think.

I do think we have a good set up now, though, a pretty good balance overall. :) I'm learning to love pattern more .

I think a lot of it is genetic too. Borderline autism maybe?

I am also doing a routine because there isn't much to do in my case @winstonalden

I think your routine is great :D. It gives a lot of room to ponder and reflect and be creative, which is important.

Except the wake up at 5 everyday since I'm more of a night owl than a morning person. Sometimes I'm still wide awake at 5 in the morning hahaha.