Tag Archives: mental-health

Post 3. Routines

People like routines. It’s just how people structure their everyday life. A couple of my friends go out for a walk every morning, rain or shine, at about 8 o’clock. It sets them up for the day. On those days when it’s too cold or really too wet and they have to stay inside, they get miserable, looking out of the window until the weather improves and they can put on strong shoes and go for the morning stroll. I admire that. 

First thing in the morning is my slow waking up time, which goes on until about 10 o’clock. After 10:00 I’m  ready to face the world. Before 10:00 everything just seems far too difficult. I used to hate going to work at 7 o’clock in the morning, especially in winter when it was dark, driving through narrow country lanes with an eye open for icy patches. 

I’d arrive at work and be faced with the jovial bonhomie of  colleagues who were early risers, happy to be up with the lark, and ready to face the challenges of the day, when all I wanted to do was grab a cup of coffee and be left alone. 

The 8 o’clock Monday morning meetings were a particular trial. Policy was made here, and everybody was expected to contribute. If, like me, you were still in a brain fog, you really didn’t have anything intelligent to say, which made you look stupid or unimaginative or perhaps not a team player.

Afternoons and the evening are a different matter altogether. By 2 o’clock I’m fully functional and continue going until about midnight. 

So my routine is a slow cup of coffee, catching up with the mail, having a look at the newspaper and generally seeing what’s going on in the world. After that, I’m ready to face the day. It’s my routine.

When we had a dog, getting up in the mornings was a mixture of chore and pleasure. I really enjoyed taking the dog out, even though it was bright and early, because of the companionship. I think it’s probably because the dog  didn’t talk. It listened patiently to anything I wanted to say, and even sometimes looked intelligently interested, but it didn’t argue or answer back or challenge my half baked ideas. I guess having a good dog structures your life for you, but it has to be taken out whether you like it or not.

But things change and you adapt to the life you now lead. These days I don’t have to go out to work and I’m free to spend as long as I like coming round with a cup of coffee. Nobody cares if I’m not washed and dressed by midday. Only my inner critic, who  speaks in my mother’s voice, quietly nags me that respectable people don’t slop around in their dressing gown half the morning, and wouldn’t I be ashamed if somebody came to the door and I had to open it when I wasn’t fully dressed. 

These days I find I’m not happy staying in all day, however creative I feel. These days I need to get out of the house otherwise I will go stir crazy. The walls close in and life becomes very oppressive, so that by 2 o’clock I’m desperate to get out either for a walk or a drive.

Partly, it’s about seeing people. I was brought up in a home where there was too much to do to waste time having coffee or tea with friends or inviting people round for supper. I can hear my mother’s voice now. Haven’t these people got anything better to do? It’s not as if their house is neat and tidy. The devil makes work for idle hands. 

That’s not really a very good way to bring up your children. You’re teaching them that other people don’t really matter and socialising isn’t important. We know that’s not true. We all need other people and having a good social life is important for everybody’s mental health, but these childhood traits run deep and become established habits that are very difficult to break. 

I like company but not all the time. I couldn’t be one of these people who has to go out for coffee with friends every morning. I’m generally very happy and comfortable with my own company but sometimes I too feel the need to meet kindred spirits. Again my childhood shapes my adult experience. if idleness is the devil’s thumbprint, work is the path to salvation and so when I need company or I’m tired of my own, I find a job.

I volunteer for a committee and throw myself into its activities. I enjoy doing that, especially if it involves problem-solving, but after a while, usually a couple of years, I find myself becoming oppressed by the expectations and the commitment, and have to move on. 

It’s one of my many shortcomings. I find it hard to relax if I have nothing to do, so my social contacts are usually for the work I choose to do .When it becomes oppressive, I can’t ease back and settle for friendship. I more or less give up, and discover later that I have not only given up for work but given up the friendships as well, and that’s not healthy. So I say to myself why don’t you do something about this, and, usually, the answer is I find another job.

Post 2. Beginnings

So, if I can’t get on with a hand written journal, I’m wondering if keeping an electronic journal might be a way into a daily writing session. Goodbye to the A4  page a day diary, with the narrow lines and intimidating pages.

Yes, I know the purists say make an hour for yourself every day, but that doesn’t work for me – there’s just so much else to do.

My first thought was to use my laptop. If I don’t like something on the laptop, I can delete it. If I’m using a book I can only delete it by cutting out the page, which always spoils an attractive book. Perhaps the attractive books need to be used for my other writing – if my poems are good, perhaps they deserve to be in a hand written book.

A bit of research pointed me towards specific journalling programs, or to using an on-line journal like WordPress. With an digital journal, there’s no intimidating blank page to fill, and for some reason, no sense of failure if I don’t write very much. Nor is there that sense of spoiling an attractive book with rambling scrawl.  

I  tried a couple of  different electronic journalling apps. I started with an app called Day 1, which had good reviews, but was a little preachy, giving me tips about things I might like to write about, as if I don’t have a brain of my own. Any programme that insists on giving me hints and tips is at a disadvantage. As it wanted me to pay to use its enhanced features, I looked elsewhere.

I had hoped to find an app that gave me a bit of colour, but they all seem to only offer black and white options. None of them offer me coloured backgrounds, which means it’s all rather dull.

I also tried using a WordPress on-line journal but it wants to give me tips and hints as well. Would I like to write about where I went yesterday, or what I had for lunch.  I suppose they think its helpful, but it annoys me. Fortunately, I discovered how to turn the hints off, which made me feel a whole lot better. It’s that combination of wanting to be in control and a lifetime of resisting being told what to do.

I decided to settle for the Apple Journal app built in to my phone and discovered the convenience of being able to dictate a journal entry and send the text to a document. I can do this whenever I want to, and wherever I might be. It saves all that scrabbling around typing badly and spending more time on corrections than on actual writing. If only the microphone was more accurate. Perhaps it will learn and adapt to my speech patterns and vocabulary.

What I like about doing it this way is that it doesn’t have to be some big thing. I don’t have to sit down for an hour with a cup of coffee and a notebook and stare at the wall or out of the window until inspiration strikes. Ten minutes with the laptop or phone open and the microphone on and I can chatter away and put the day’s events into perspective.

I wouldn’t want to be dictating my journal if there were other people about, but it’s easy to do when I’m in the house on my own, especially when everyone has gone to bed. It means I have a bit of time to myself to reflect on the day and where  I think I want to go with my writing and other  elements of my life. Why is it that journalling feels as if it has to be done in secret? It’s the confessional, I suppose.

I’m not sure the entries I’m making all the stuff of great literature but it’s a start and perhaps the great literature will come later.

And suddenly this seems to be coming together.

Post 1. First Thoughts

Why am I writing this blog? It’s about self discipline and conquering imposter syndrome. After totally failing to keep to my 2024 and 2025 resolutions of writing every day and keeping a journal, I thought I’d stick my neck out and put a weekly blog on the internet. Don’t expect great literature or world shattering philosophical insights. The blog’s a public statement, a commitment to publish something every week. I don’t expect to have any readers, and this is little more than deranged ramblings, but they are my ramblings, and if they are out there, I’ve met my target of writing something every week.

My attempts to keep a journal in 2025 were a complete disaster. I bought an A4 page a day diary, thinking  I would be easily able to fill a page a day (half a page on Saturdays and Sundays) but the lines were quite narrow and the whole page to fill became intimidating when I felt tired or had been too busy to sit down and write. Yes, I know the purists say make an hour for yourself every day, but that doesn’t work for me – there’s just so much else to do.

I succeeded until mid March when various reasons stopped the regular flow, and before I could turn round, a couple of month had passed and I had got out of the habit. 

The empty dated pages looked at me like a rebuke. How could you ignore me, they say. Aren’t I important enough? You did Monday and Tuesday. What have I done to offend you on Wednesday? So a book of undated pages, an occasional book if you like, might work better for me.

Some of my writer friends are mustard keen on daily writing – morning pages, cafe writing – but I struggle, so lets stop pretending I’m going to be self disciplined enough to keep a page-a-day diary and find another way.

I have several very attractive blank books given me by friends to encourage me to write, but that’s the problem. The books are lovely – excellent quality paper, often with beautiful illustrations on facing pages and sometimes with prompts to get me started. Imposter syndrome barges in. What do you  have to say that is worth spoiling these beautiful pages? The book looks so much better empty, and writing anything less than great literature in it idoesn’t seem acceptable. The book is spoiled, and somehow that seems disrespectful to my friends.

A cheap A5 book from Smiths doesn’t seem like desecration., though, of course, a notebook means I have to sit down, preferably at a desk, find a pencil and start the process off, and perhaps transcribe it to the lap top later if I want to use the ideas.

My new year’s resolution is to try again. You are welcome to join me on my journey.