The Art of the War of Art
Wednesday, July 1, 2009 at 9:05PM
My friend Bronson recently suggested I read a book about "breaking through blocks and winning your inner creative battles" called The War of Art. I countered that I didn’t have writer’s block, I just didn’t know what to write, which sounded confident and self-aware until I typed it into our IM, where it immediately became retarded. But since Amazon One-Click purchasing was activated on my computer, and I love technology, it arrived in 48 hours.
Most of us have two lives. The life we live, and the unlived life within us. Between the two stands Resistance.
I was instantly exhausted and confronted. This seemed like a good place to stop and contemplate my general disdain of books, and reading in general. And following the advice of friends.
Thankfully I had thought to bring two popsicles to this reading session with me, so I put the book down, and spent several minutes carefully unwrapping the popsicle, wrapping the paper back around the lower stick, sucking on the top, and positioning the popsicle in a way that would provide easy access to both eating it with one hand, and turning the page with the other. It was like a popsicle tea ceremony. I continued.
Are you a writer who doesn’t write, a painter who doesn’t paint, an entrepreneur who never starts a venture? Then you know what Resistance is.
I sighed loudly and closed my eyes. This mattress pad is amazing. How does Costco have such low prices? I wonder if they have free samples during the week, or is it only on weekends?
I continued to read the book for what must have been at least 90 seconds, and began physically writhing and twisting on the bed. Each word burned my skin like holy water on Linda Blair, and I fidgeted until I could bear it no more. I took the book to the bathroom.
When you don’t have a real job, you begin creating tasks to complete during your day, which give you a feeling of satisfaction and accomplishment. A year ago I had tasks like:
- edit video
- write 10 pages
- wash car
Now my list includes easier items like:
- eat a snack
- cuddle with dog
- go to the bathroom
I’m a week away from adding “digest food” and “divide my cells.” But I realized that I forgot to add "read Art of War" to my list... So with nothing to cross off when it was done, this whole attempt could be considered wasted time.
And at this point in time I didn't even have an active list to add to, so I'd have to create a brand new list. I made a mental note to create a list, and a second mental note to add this book to the list. Maybe I should keep a physical list of mental notes? I made a third mental note to create a physical list of mental notes.
Before further filling up my mental note pad, I thought I’d check how many pages I’d read so far, to try and psyche myself into going on, like one of the contestants on the Biggest Loser hoping they had lost at least 10 pounds. But there were no page numbers! This was madness. Why would they write a book and not include page numbers? I flipped through the book and there seemed to be numbered pages towards the back... Finally I realized that the pages of the book were numbered, except for the Intro, which was four pages long and I was still stranded on page two. I’d been wrestling with this book for a half hour and apparently had only turned the page once.
After such an intense realization, it seemed like a good time to shave my face.
Who does Bronson think he is, implying that I have writer’s block? That I’m not focused. He has no right... to ask me how I feel. He has no right to speak to me so kind. We can’t go on, just holding on to time. Now that we’re living separate lives.
Whatever happened to Phil Collins? I once saw Philip Bailey at the Jazz Festival in Montreax and and he did that duet "Easy Lover" with Phil Collins.
God, Swiss chocolate is amazing. I had so much hair back then.
I don't think I'm resisting anything, or unfocused -- that's absurd. I'm just busy. I've got 14 hours of Tivo to catch up on. Plus I have these cans of soup that somehow made it down onto my cracker shelf, so my whole pantry is in chaos. Those cans aren't going to organize themselves! And when did I buy garbanzo beans?
I was about to move to the dining room where I could more formally sit down and focus on reading when it suddenly occurred to me... When is the best time of day to jerk off?
I should do some testing. Nothing scientific. Maybe throw together a chart in Keynote. Although I won't have time to read this book if I’m working on a Keynote chart.
It's all about priorities. If I read this book now, other more important timelines may suffer. How can I decide?
In conclusion:
Research conducted over 48-hour period in June 2009. Your results may vary.
Paul Horne |
2 Comments | 

Reader Comments (2)
if this doesn't lock in the murphy goode job, nothing will
I'm glad to have discovered your work. Genius. I'll be following you (not in a creepy stalker way, or anything). Good luck with Top 10.