fear

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It was about three years ago now that I began to fade from the academic music scene as a composer.  I tend to say that family commitments pulled me away, and that’s partly true.  But it’s equally true (just a lot more difficult) to say that I came to something of a crisis and decided that I didn’t have much of a clue what I was actually doing there in the first place.

I think I could probably sketch more than one narrative for why that is.  Maybe I didn’t have the dedication or single-minded focus to jump-start life as a professional.  Maybe I have absolutely no talent or skill to write music!  Or maybe it’s just that being an artist makes you so damn vulnerable, and my skin (not to mention my ego) aren’t tough enough for the bruising.

Whatever the reason, I continually found myself in that ‘between-a-rock-and-a-hard-place’ position.  When I just pressed on and did what I wanted, I was dogged by the suspicion that I must be an egotistical bore to other people, an artistic Don Quixote. And anyway, I was often unhappy with the result, so wasn’t that just confirmation that I had no right to confidence in the first place?  When the pendulum inevitably swung the other way and I proceeded full of caution and self-criticism, I didn’t fare much better.  Oscillating back and forth, I eventually sunk into complete paralysis.  Life moved on, I started a family and kept up with odd jobs, and wondered if it would be best for to define myself somehow, somewhere else.  I didn’t officially give up composing, but I didn’t necessarily see it as a sabbatical, either.

I still don’t have answers to my questions.  I’m still full of doubt and self-criticism, and can’t honestly say how much of it is warranted.  (It’s so unsettling to feel that you can’t even trust your opinion of your own self!)  I suppose it’s something that will be with me for a while.

However, something has changed.  I feel it in my bones, like the changing of the seasons.  I want to write music. It’s not that I didn’t before, but somehow there’s an urgency that I didn’t always feel when I took the student life for granted.  It probably has something to do with my realisation that my 20s will be over before I know it, and that seems somehow important.  I feel the same way about music as I do about parenting:  when my life is over, I’d like to be able to look back and say ‘I made that!’

So, for better or worse, I’m turning my little boat into the wind and facing my uncertainties head-on.  I’ve started re-orienting the rest of my life according to that decision, especially by requesting an extra dispensation of patience from my wonderful wife, and permission to spend many late evenings huddled over the laptop.  But most importantly, I’m resolved to see myself as an artist.  Perhaps a failed artist, but one nonetheless.

I wish I could say that my new-found fervour caused my clouds of anxiety to disappear in a fresh breeze of creative fulfilment.  In reality I’ve already had many struggles, and one near-complete mental breakdown just yesterday.  And it’s only been a few weeks!  In another couple of weeks I’ll be able to see if I have much to show for it, and I’d love to publish fragments of drafts here if I can stomach anyone else seeing them.

In the meantime, I would be grateful to anyone who has any advice on how to harness the creative urge without it turning into a toxic sludge of anxiety and self-deprecation…

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‘Tao’, as you may know, is translated from Chinese as ‘the way’.  I think I read somewhere that it is even the word they use for ‘road’ or ‘street’ in China today.

However, several millenia ago certain Chinese philosophers began using the word Tao in a much bigger sense.  They believed that everything in heaven and earth followed a universal way.  This way — Tao — is part of everything, and so we find it when we do what is most natural (which is not always what is easiest!).  It doesn’t need to invented, only discovered.

Taoists, then, are on a lifelong treasure-hunt.  Whatever the scenario, they know that the right course of action is already there, even if it is buried by other things, like selfishness or fear or uncertainty.

I was reminded of this in a really obvious way on Monday when Melissa and I went to a physiotherapy session at our hospital to prepare for giving birth.  Physiotherapy is concerned with helping the body to find its natural strength and flexibility.  Amazingly (but perhaps not surprisingly!) it was full of Taoist sentiments.

The midwife ‘teacher’ stressed more than anything else that tension is counter-productive.  Clenched fists and raised shoulders exhaust the muscles and prevent contractions from being productive.  Moreover, they send feedback messages back to the brain that the situation is dangerous, encouraging the ‘fight or flight’ syndrome of fear and aggression (which, in return, causes more muscle tension.)  Stretching fingers and dropping shoulders encourages feelings of calmness and control, and helps labour to progress.

Movement and position are also important.  If there’s no reason to suspect any trouble, it’s better to stay ‘unhooked’ from machines and wires to find a comfortable position, or to sit in a pool.  When the baby is ready to come out, it’s best to be in a kneeling posture where pushing muscles work best and gravity is assisting the birth.

Even though pain relief is available, the midwife during Melissa’s first pregnancy emphasised the benefits of natural birth.  Numbing the body makes it less able to function properly.  She promised in no uncertain terms that it would be the worst pain Melissa ever felt, but that it would be ‘positive pain’, which means that it is goal-directed, not purposeless.

It often the case in science and mathematics that different people, sometimes in different parts of the world, arrive at the same conclusions in completely different ways.  I am encouraged that I keep finding pieces of the Tao Te Ching everywhere I look.  Could the Tao be as trustworthy as the motion of the stars, or Pythagoras’ theorem?

We’ll be back in the maternity ward soon.  Wish us luck!

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Olivia and I were at home this morning when some men came to tear down and replace the fence between our back garden and next door’s.  Unfortunately for Olivia, this process involved a large electric saw and lots of other banging and scraping noises!  She is at the age where she can recognise that something is scary, but definitely not old enough to objectify her feelings when I tell her it’s not actually dangerous :)

She is very funny when she’s scared, because she stops whatever she’s doing and freezes.  Completely.  Her face goes completely blank.  If something has startled her she might cry after the fact, but if it’s something continuing (like the sound of the saw) she doesn’t usually cry.

Of course I have to show her that it’s not really dangerous, so we tried looking at the window as they were working.  Not that I think it will make her stop being afraid of course, but it seems important anyway.  So then we went upstairs and shut the windows and doors and sat on the other side of the house, in our bedroom, and read some books.  By this time they had stopped for a while and she probably started to forget about it.

But of course they soon started again.  I was in the middle of reading a story and I looked over at her sitting on the other side of the bed.  She was frozen completely and her big eyes were just fixed on me, unblinking.  I could tell that she was so scared on the inside, and was determined not to show it.  So I said, ‘Do you want a hug?’ and she just nodded, without a sound.  I held out my arms and she came over and buried her head in my chest.  Then she reached behind her to make sure that my arms were covering her well enough.  Olivia always gives good hugs, but this time it was something else:  she needed to feel that she was safe and secure, out of harm’s reach.

What a blessing to be able to give that security to someone else!  Maybe that’s the best thing any parent can do.  I hope I can always be there for her when she needs that reassurance.  And of course we all need that sense of unbreachable security — from family or friends or familiar places.  Sometimes we find it in spirituality or religion.  Materialists argue that supernatural reassurance is an illusion.  I think that the experience of complete trust and faith in someone else has a power that transcends the physical world.  I think it is an anchor for the human experience, and a pointer towards something that people once had that we have lost, or something that we will someday achieve… or maybe both.

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