• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

meet john gray

  • Home
  • Blog
    • Mindfulness
    • Running
    • Home
    • Travel
    • Photography
    • Technology
  • Writing Portfolio​
  • Images
  • About
  • Nav Social Menu

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn

Blog

Priorities

11/07/2011 by John Leave a Comment

Many months have passed since last I posted something in this space. It would be easy to say that I have been busy, but in the end it is not a question of what I have been doing instead of writing, it is a question of priorities. What do we do with the limited amount of time we have allotted to us? Each day. Each moment.

It is sometimes difficult to know one’s priorities. When I try to discern them, I feel forces tugging at me from many directions. These include the things I think I should be doing, the tasks I really need to do, and items that I may perceive as needs but that perhaps I should not be spending my time and attention on. When choosing priorities, what often gets left out of the equation is doing those things that can add more meaning to life, those things that make us look deeply inside ourselves.

When choosing priorities, what often gets left out of the equation is doing those things that can add more meaning to life, those things that make us look deeply inside ourselves.

The priorities in my life have been in a constant state of flux lately. I inhabit two very different worlds and have been moving between them with a great deal of frequency. There is my working world and my Asheville world. In the working world, I am away from home either leading an Outward Bound course or guiding bicycle tours. My priorities in the working world are decided for me. I get up early and work until I fall into bed exhausted at night. All my priorities for the day are dictated according to what’s going on with the trip, and the people involved with it. My time spent in the working world allows me to not have to make any decisions about my priorities.

I think it could be that many of us like to have our priorities determined for us. It allows us to abdicate some level of responsibility for our lives. If we are unsatisfied or unhappy, we can lay some blame on the fact that some external force, be it our jobs or some person in our life, is in control of our time. This sloughing off of responsibility might not be particularly healthy, and it could lead to some deep resentments. But having our priorities laid out for us is certainly easier than deciding for ourselves what to do with the finite amount of time we are granted.

Upon returning to my Asheville world, I have a blank slate in front of me ranging in length from a day or two to several weeks. One would think this should be an invigorating thing, but it usually stresses me out to no end. As I wake each morning, my mind begins to thrash about, parsing through what I might do, weighing all sorts of competing impulses against one another. Though I have a whole day ahead of me, it amazes me how quickly the time gets filled, yet too often I am left with the feeling that I did not accomplish anything of substance.

There is always a long list of the day to day tasks that life and society requires that I do to keep things humming along, things that are important like keeping the house in order and dealing with finances, etc. Other chunks of time are filled with those self-imposed priorities such as keeping up with the stacks of reading material both analog and digital that I have allowed into my life, or opening up a web browser to do something that at one time I had deemed important only to realize an hour later that I do not even remember what that thing was and whether or not I had actually accomplished it or not. All this leaves little time for that list of things I think I would really like to do, the projects that require more time and focus. These are the things that might have no immediate tangible benefits, but may create more real value in my life and perhaps that of others.

The issue is this: The things that add value to our lives and the world we live in can be difficult, sometimes even painful to do. It is difficult to get out of bed on a cold, rainy morning and go for a run, even though the physical and emotional benefits are well worth it. It may seem inconvenient or uncomfortable to make a few phone calls in order to set up some intentional time to spend with the important people in our life, or to schedule an opportunity to be of service to someone who needs it. And for me, it feels difficult to put in the effort required to try and create something of quality that I hope will be of some worth to others instead of just an outlet for whatever thoughts might be running around in my head.

If we can learn how to pay attention to the choices we make regarding how we spend our time, we have the power to change.

So here is what I try and remember about priorities: Every moment of our life, we get to start again. We can refocus our priorities on the things that are truly important to us. If we can learn how to pay attention to the choices we make regarding how we spend our time, we have the power to change.

Though I have not visited this space for quite some time now, for the next month there is no work on my calendar and many rough drafts in the queue that need polishing and refining. Will they ever see the light of day here? It is really a question of priorities and whether or not I can wade through all the other things that are pulling at my attention to see clearly if this is one of them. Stay tuned.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: creativity, focus, mindfulness

Letting Go

01/23/2011 by John 1 Comment

Picture of For Sale Sign in front of 20 Chatham Road

Many of you might remember that this blog began with a post detailing Mary and my struggle with whether or not to remain home owners. Well, as far as this home is concerned, I think we may have answered that question.

20 Chatham Road is officially on the market.

It’s not that we don’t like this house. We are quite fond of it. We have spent quite a bit of time and money making the house into the home it it today. Walls have been removed, kitchens remodeled, and furniture rearranged ad nauseam. And please, don’t even inquire as to how many times it took us to paint the bathroom until we finally got it right. You may be wondering then why we are moving and where we are going to go?

As for the where are we going question, well, I don’t know. We don’t really have a clear vision of what’s next. We are still wondering whether ownership is what we want or not. I guess we will have to sort out that decision soon. The question of why we are going did become somewhat clearer to me recently.

It all comes down to letting go.

Why have we been thinking about selling this house for so many years now and not done anything about it? As for me, an answer to that question is that I have been afraid about what would be next. Where will we go? What about all of our stuff? I have learned to hold on to the safety and security of owning the house.

A podcast I recently listened to was on this topic of letting go. It talked about the ways we hold on to things, and that this holding on can become like a closed fist. The issue with having a closed fist is that it can be very limiting. Think about it, what can you really do with a closed fist? Sure you can keep holding on to whatever your thing is, you can pound stuff with it, and wave it in the air with indignation or just while rocking out, but that’s about it. Now, consider an open hand and how much more it can do. It can reach out to others, or be used to make something beautiful. It can reach forward and point towards the horizon. Letting go is about having an open hand.

Though we do not yet know what is next for us, we are looking forward to it with excitement and of course a certain healthy amount of uncertainty. We have had a great five years in this house. As we move forward, we hope to do so with a sense of possibility and with open hands outstretched.

Filed Under: Home Tagged With: mindfulness

Farmers and Sailors

01/08/2011 by John 12 Comments

Sunrise at Picnic Key

Sunrise

As I stepped outside, the darkness of night was punched through with a million tiny pinholes of light. The rays of the sun would not begin to lighten the eastern horizon for another half hour, ushering in a new day, the last of an Outward Bound course that had spanned the New Year’s holiday bridging the time between 2010 and 2011. The dew clung heavily over all exposed surfaces, giving everything a shimmering quality with the starlight providing illumination. I made my way across the lawn of the Sunset Island base camp and looked upon the tents and personal bug shelters, where our students were still soundly sleeping. I glanced up and saw a shooting star blazing it’s short life across the canopy of the universe overhead. I walked more slowly, eyes pointed upwards. Another! At the bottom of the stairs leading into the lodge, I paused, and saw yet another shooting star. The sky above was alive this morning with spent pieces of the cosmos taking their final plunge after a journey none of us could possibly imagine. I turned to face the door, took one more lingering look at the sky above, and then placed my foot on the first stair. The coffee pot was calling, it was time to head inside again. It was time for the sailor to rest, and for the farmer to once again take prominence in my life.

For the past week, I had traveled by sea kayak through Everglades National Park and the 10,000 Islands National Wildlife Refuge with eight strangers and my co-instructor. It had been a good Outward Bound course. For me, the end of it marked the end of a period of many months of movement, of being outdoors. Since June, I have not spent much time in one place for very long. Leading backpacking trips, bicycle tours, and being away on vacation has kept me in motion. Heading inside that last morning of course felt symbolic to me of the larger direction my life will be going during the next several months. The sailor in me was returning from sea for awhile.

Kayaking at Gullivan Key

Kayaking by Gullivan Key

I am back in Asheville today, settled into my favorite chair, and ready to begin being a member of the community of people here. I will step back into the role of full-time student for the semester. I will enjoy watching the winter turn to spring. This is the farmer in me.

This concept of farmers and sailors was brought to my attention by a post I was reading this morning from a blog called The Path Less Pedaled.

[A friend] said, “There’s basically two kinds of people on this earth. There are farmers….and there are sailors. Farmers are the people that take great joy in laying down roots and are comforted by the predictable day to day routine and the dependable seasons. Sailors have to be constantly moving and looking for new experiences. There is nothing more satisfying than the prospects of a new port for a sailor. The world needs both kinds.” I’m not quite sure if I’m either wholly farmer or wholly sailor

I could not agree more. The farmer in me loves my home and community here in Asheville. He enjoys raking the leaves to the curb in the fall and going out to breakfast with friends at his favorite breakfast spot. But the sailor within me just won’t be quiet. He is a restless soul who does not tolerate sitting still for too long.

Therein lies my challenge. Can I convince the farmer and the sailor to work out a compromise? In 2010, I was able to have them coexist fairly well, though always at some level of uneasy tension between the two of them. When one of them is allowed to thrive, the other necessarily must suffer some. One thing is certain, the farmer and the sailor are both a part of me and neither is going away any time soon. And the thing is, the farmer within me learns so much from the sailor, just as the sailor is nourished by the contributions of the farmer.

What about you? Are you a farmer, a sailor, or a little of both?

The Mag, a sailboat, at sunrise

The Mag at sunrise

Gullivan Key at sunset

Gullivan Key at sunset

Filed Under: Home, Travel Tagged With: Outward Bound, sea kayaking

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 184
  • Page 185
  • Page 186
  • Page 187
  • Page 188
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Want to hear from me?

Archives

Search

Copyright © 2025 · Foodie Pro & The Genesis Framework

 

Loading Comments...