
Last week, I was home with a cold. It wasn’t anything major, just a head cold that knocked me off my feet, gave me a pounding headache, kept me under the covers, and had me breathing through half of one nostril.
Even when my first priority is to get better, I can’t help but think that with the extra free time on my hands, it would be a great time to write. But I can’t. When I am feeling under the weather, words just don’t come.
Maybe it’s related to the fact that my oxygen supply is not at full capacity, or that my ears are affected and that I could potentially throw up at any given moment… it’s a little distracting.
But over the last 3 years of writing the blog, I have noticed that if I want to keep to a posting schedule of at least one or two works per week, I need to keep a few drafts in my back pocket for times like this.
The worst was when I was out with shingles for several weeks. I remember trying desperately to commit words to paper, but everything I wrote was disjointed, disconnected and frankly wasn’t up to my usual style or standards. Maybe it was the medication, maybe it was the illness, but the writing was as crappy as I felt.
When a migraine strikes, forget about writing. Even if I turn down the computer screen to its lowest brightness level, it’s still blinding when light sensitivity sets in. Plus, stringing ideas together in some kind of coherent fashion is beyond challenging when I could swear others can hear the pounding going on in my head.
And of course, when it comes to the common cold, I can’t breathe, I can’t see the screen through my watery eyes and all I want to do is sleep. Not exactly the most conducive factors to writing a blog post destined to go viral, pardon the pun.
Even under trying circumstances, I am surprised at what I can accomplish. As much as a calm, quiet setting is my ideal, I can still scribble ideas from a patio table on a sidewalk in the middle of construction or heavy traffic. Or even at work, to deal with a challenging situation, I can often come up with the right words, at the right time, under the pressure of a deadline.
I pride myself in this skill! If I was a superhero, I’d consider this my superpower!
But yet, surprisingly, it doesn’t take more than a little sinus congestion to prevent me from channeling the little writer’s voice, like it has been sent to a room with lead walls. It is most discouraging. I can barely write a grocery list.
When that happens, all I can do is to be patient, not worry, not panic, be good to myself and just focus on getting better.
And then when I least expect it, one night as I am just trying to fall asleep, the inner voice starts pitching ideas like “what about a blog post about getting sick and not being able to write?”
When the mind starts racing, the idea takes off and I have to turn on the light to take notes. That is when I know that I must be feeling better and it is time to go back to work.
How about you, fellow artists? Are you able to work on your craft when you don’t feel at your best?
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Sincere thanks for reading!
Have a great day,
André








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