Anything. Competitive or not, when I’m close to finish a sudden relaxation arises. I feel there’s no rush, that I am almost there. I sometimes slow down to my 25%, when I was doing my 100% at the beginning.
I’m not tired, but suddenly I feel exhausted. I’m not done,
but suddenly I feel fulfilled.
When I see the finish line I suddenly convince myself that
finishing isn’t the most important thing. I tell myself that it’s fine if I
drop out here; I convince myself that there is no problem if I do it.
This doesn’t mean I drop out, I’ve learnt to know myself and
I am ready for this 'downing' thought. But, even though I acknowledged it, it still
is hard to battle. It requires an extra of will power that sometimes you’re
not down to give.
When I was younger I asked my dad about this
feeling. I used the running example: when you start you’re super excited, but
when you’re half-way through your body starts weakening although you know you
still have a couple km’s to finish. His answered focused on will-power and how
hard is to keep the excitement throughout the way.
The running example wasn’t more than an introduction to
what, to a certain extent, would become a pretty annoying problem of my
personality. This mixture of ambition and laziness that climbs to my shoulder
when I’m making a decision. Take the harder road, but don’t worry if you can’t
finish it.
Now that I’m writing my 20 stories I can see this hasn’t
left yet. My starting idea was 90. Three months before turning 20 I wanted to
write one story a day about a fact of my personality. Now that the time to
publish them has come I can barely say I wrote 20.
Throughout the process I went through high excitement and
writing every day to weeks out without any ideas. Self-analysing and
criticising myself sometimes isn’t as exciting as it looks. Exposing weaknesses
aiming for an improvement, or at least to a self-acceptance of my problems
after finishing my adolescence; process where I went from the last thing in the
universe to a God-like image filled with the insecurities of high-egos.
This pseudo-duality – pseudo because includes all the
opinions in between these polarisations – is typical in this period of years
when we move along knowing nothing to believing we know everything. When I
realised it I thought it would be interesting to analyse it. See what has
changed and what continues with me now that I jumped this imaginary border of
my teenage years.
And here is the end. The publishing moment. I don’t think I’ve gotten the deepest I
could get, but it works as a first intent. It’s a project that I
don’t know how I feel about yet. I’m self-conscious about exposing my guts to
whoever reads it, but proud I can do it with no repercussion on my personality
or security. I actually believe it will be helpful in a way I haven’t
understood yet.
The best is yet to come, said someone once who inspired my project. I'll beat my will-power, my embarrassment and my inner-walls throughout the weeks.
I'll learn and humanise myself.
It's always time to experience something new.
Muy bueno!!!
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