In the early days of courtship, the Mister would frequently reach for me, pulling me back into bed, at o’fuck thirty as I tried to slip away and ready myself for work. He would draw me close, uh, demonstrate his need and whisper in my ear jokingly that guys were rationed a limited number of erections during their lifetimes, and it would be unconscionable to waste one.
What if our lives are predefined by allocated quantities? Each person is granted a specified amount of love, hate, luck or passion. Not predestination, but energy appropriation. Frequently, I don’t I have enough passion to meet all my needs. It’s as if all the passion I’m granted is indivisible for separate endeavors. All or nothing.
There are weeks I flit around from one task to the nest, never finishing anything, just exchanging one preoccupation for the next. After all the absent mindedness settles, I concentrate for longer periods of time, until the concentration morphs into a palatable unwavering focus propelling me to work longer, harder and more efficiently. The casualties of this driving force are usually those who mean the most to me. Ironically those same people, or should I say the same person, doesn’t grasp I can’t dismiss this burning like one does a wrong number, or an ill-fitting pair of shoes. I’m just not hard wired, they same as he.
I proselytized the importance of balance in life to decease the complexity and danger of juggling too many issues, yet I rarely maintain steadiness for an extended period of time, when left to my own devices. I have a single measure of antisocial passion. It either leaves me with an an insatiable appetite to straddle my man, or the desire to draw, sketch and develop, but rarely the desire for both during the same cycle.
The house painting is complete, the walls adorned, the bathroom vanity is almost dry, and the Mister is properly laid. The projects which guilted me away from the studio, are driving me to return. The approaching ardor is completely selfish. I am returning to more structured studio time for my need only, not the encouragement of my friends and family. If I did it for them, I would feel somewhat beholden, as if their pleasure took priority over mine.
I need to divide this passion, allowing my relationship to burn with the same intensity as my desire to create. Yet, it’s never that easy. When I devote myself to a drawing, I relinquish all of myself to the imagery, the media, and the emotional process. Waking hours are wasted expended in complete service for whatever project is at hand, whether it be drawing, construction, dirty flip book, or landscape design. I neglect sharing myself (emotionally or otherwise) with my partner, when I am consumed.
I don’t want drive to be an all or nothing proposition. I don’t want to compromise my libido for a suite of erotic drawings, nor do I want to forfeit creativity in favor of an lunchtime lay. I (actually, we) need all these things to continue a strong relationship. We both need to feel independent, and simultaneously needed, lascivious and purposeful, whole yet symbiotic.

Beating a Dead Horse
This was a personal project I started on to cope with my lackluster career as a graphic designer. Beating a dead horse doesn’t translate in Spanish as an idiom, but I wanted a phrase that was significant to me. Media: Colored pencil.
August 14th, 2008 at 8:22 pm
I think I might have the same problem as you. I have the desire, but not the focus, and if ever I am focused, it flits to a new project too easily. Only rarely have I managed to keep my focus on one project to completion! Sometimes I criticize myself for it and wonder if it means I am not meant to be “doing this”.
August 14th, 2008 at 8:54 pm
As you say, you are not wired the same. It’s the passion that takes you where you want to go, in bed and out.
Selfishly, i hope you abandon yourself (foe a while) to the art, so that i may view the results.
August 15th, 2008 at 10:40 am
If this is who you are, then it is who you are. I don’t know if you CAN change this singlemindedness much less if you should. If you were to change, would your art survive? Would you be happy if you weren’t like this?
My wife has a brother-in-law who is an artist. He has a somewhat similar temperament, when he’s working on a project he is entirely focused on it and on nothing else. My wife’s sister learned to live with his idiosyncrasies and they’ve been married now for over 30 years.
I don’t necessarily mean to say that you and your husband just have to learn to put up with it and there’s nothing to be done - but I am suggesting that this is pretty much who you are. Can you learn to be comfortable with this? Can your husband? Only you and he can answer that question.
August 15th, 2008 at 11:21 am
I don’t think you are alone in this, especially in the creative world. And I have to say I’m with meno….
August 15th, 2008 at 11:59 am
you’ve said it all. now, where’s the post about how you compromise your sex life and there’s not a scrap of art to show for it?
*sigh*
August 15th, 2008 at 1:26 pm
er, how did my comment get so messed up? I wasn’t eve drinking!
What I meant to say was that I think I have a different problem, and that I wish it was instead the same as yours.
August 15th, 2008 at 2:16 pm
rachel, there aren’t any hard and fast rules about how you approach working. Maybe your working style is better suited for working on multiple projects. If you find yourself blocked on one project, you can work on another. It’s okay for a project to “rest” rather than force it to completion, you gain more insight, and strengthen the execution.
meno, I want it all! (stomps feet) I don’t want to choose…but I think I already have.
Bob, thanks for visiting. I’m not interested in changing, but I would like to soften the transition of the passion shift. My husband is very supportive and seems to take most of the shifts in stride. Like most couples, we both bring our individual idiosyncrasies to the relationship.
qt, relatively speaking, my process is a sane one. The difficulty is in the recognition. Self-awareness of of this all or nothing characteristic, makes me want to altar it, and achieve the best of both.
liv, there is a limit on public honesty.
rachel ;). maybe it isn’t really a problem.
August 15th, 2008 at 8:48 pm
Everyone is missing the point here. Let’s go back to those dirty flip books!
I know, Chica. But we can’t drink and breathe at the same time either (or at least we shouldn’t).
You won’t be any good to him or anyone else if you don’t.
I bet that when you’re with your man, he is your single focus, yes? Stop feeling guilty and create!
August 16th, 2008 at 1:33 am
I have the opposite thing. When I’m happy about writing, I’m happy about sex. I’m very all or nothing. But I’m glad you’re the way you are or I wouldn’t have the pleasure of reading such beautiful writing.
August 18th, 2008 at 8:16 am
nancy, this isn’t guilt. This is frustration. I want it all! And I know my man wouldn’t find himself debating the topic as I have, because he probably wouldn’t be aware of it…since we aren’t programmed the same. I’m not throwing stones, just stating an observation.
andrea, does Rex know how this works? Because he could totally take advantage of the situation, though it sounds as if you already are