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motivation and commitment

Part of me wants to think that I'm just lazy. But if I really look at it I start to see that really, I lack motivation and commitment. I realized this after reading a post from a friend having a similar problem.

Look at yesterday. I got up at 6:30. I got caught up online, did a little work, wrote, edited a photo, and got myself ready by 9am. I walked to breakfast then walked to work. I was there by 10 and worked until 7pm taking only 45 minutes for lunch. After work I drove to dinner. Then I took some photographs of the city, drove around a bit, and ended up at the hotel by 10pm. I went to bed reading at 11:30 and spent the time in between online. While I could certainly stand to cut back on my time online, it's not like I'm even a little bit lazy. I do plenty of stuff. I just lack the motivation to do the things I know I should do that also tend to be time consuming or require some form of commitment.

At least for the first year or so, my goal is to take photographs of Celeste every month on or near her month birthday. For a photographer one quick and easy photoshoot at home should be no problem but, somehow, I keep putting it off. Two weeks from now she'll be 6 months old and I still haven't even come up with an idea for her 5 month photos. I did take her 3 month and 4 month photos but I still haven't printed them or mailed them to anyone. The only reason they are edited is because my mother-in-law forced me to do it while they were here. Something so simple and rewarding shouldn't be difficult to convince myself to do.

Look at all the abandoned photography projects or photo adventures. With the projects, I just keep saying I'm working on them. For the photo adventures, I always have a good excuse. I can find the time and I certainly have the energy. It must be motivation that keeps me from doing these things.

I think I actually have the opposite of motivation: anti-motivation. Maybe you could even call it inertia. I think it is fueled, in part, by a fear of commitment. These larger projects have so many aspects to them. They require planning and dedication. There are people who expect them and are waiting patiently for them. There is something in my head that clicks in all the wrong directions and pushes back on these things. I think I'm afraid of letting myself or others down so much, that I don't even bother to get started. Give me a series of small tasks to perform today and I'm fine. Give me a larger task to accomplish over a period of time, and somehow, it never gets done.

I have great time management skills. And I'm more than capable of managing very large projects with intricate time lines and rushed due dates. I do this all day every day at my day job. But, when I get home, some how that all shuts off.

At work, the reward for accomplishing large projects on time is obvious: a paycheck and the promise of more work. However, at home, it's harder to find motivation to make these personal commitments. Most of the people I know undertake projects that benefit themselves and possibly their immediate family. Going beyond that is rare. This isn't a complaint at all. It's just the way it is. But the projects I undertake are generally intended to impact more than just myself. I think that maybe the reason I find it so hard to commit to this work is because the rewards are not nearly as obvious.

So I'm looking for help. Someone to share a project with or someone with a goal of their own so we can keep each other in check. Someone offering a reward (silly or serious) for the completion of a project. Or someone to monitor and praise my progress during a project.

Here's what I'm working on: Skins editing, summer camping trip, celeste monthly photos, wet/water shoot with model, website redesign and migration, sensual anonymity (more models and more photos), rural night photography, clean studio shots of random objects (hi tech catalog type work).

sleping alone

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  • It will be of no surprise to you from our conversations over the years (on LiveJournal) that I share a similar problem with drive and commitment; it's not that the enthusiasm isn't there - just that "I let" other things in life get in the way as some kind of auto-mechanism to excuse myself from the fear of failure.

    I would be very interested in trying to do something, although I'm not sure a joint project would work for me; instead I would find us doing the same project/theme separately an interesting exercise to how we tackle it. Ultimately the one who produces the best (if any) result would get a reward/prize.

    As much as I'd like any prize/reward for you to involve "a day at a harem" I can't see that happening, but I'm sure I'll think of something else similar that will spur you on!

    I'm on/around messenger if you wanna chat further :)
  • I can so relate to this post. Of course, for me, once I ask someone to start motivating me, then I start ignoring/hiding from/resenting them. This is because I am an asshole.
  • I promise not to be an asshole if you become my motivator.

    Ha


    (sent via BlackBerry)
  • Monica
    I will definitely help with the water photo shoot. :) You should know, though, that it is all part of my plan to see you and Jess and Celeste after an excruciatingly long period of time. Oh, and shower you all with delicious baked goods, of course.
  • Yay! I know you've been wanting to do this. We really just need to set
    a date and get it done. The weather is great for this now and we've
    got tons of day light. Let me know what works for you... as long as it
    isn't in July since I'll be out of town for almost all of it.
  • Jenn
    if you died tomorrow. would being on top of all of those things make you happy? ;)

    i wonder if i'll be a full-fledged hippy before i die? ;p
  • Well, if I died tomorrow I don't think anything about this world would
    make me happy... since I'd be dead and either rotting in the ground or
    concerned with something greater.

    These things don't really even make me happy while I'm alive. To some
    extent they do. But it's not the project that makes me happy, is the
    benefits those projects have the potential to produce that makes me
    happy. Even photographing women in various states of undress can get
    boring after time. But meeting new people, seeing new ideas come
    forth, forging new lasting relationships, and instigating thought or
    emotion in other people... those things do make me feel very good
    about myself.

    I don't mind the hippie route. In fact, I partake in that philosophy a
    bit myself. And I don't think what I'm doing counteracts that.
    Happiness and fulfilment are always the end goal. It's where that
    happiness comes from that changes.
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