Juan Ponce de León spent his life searching for the
fountain of youth. I have spent mine searching for the ideal daily
routine. But as years of color-coded paper calendars have given way to
cloud-based scheduling apps, routine has continued to elude me; each day
is a new day, as unpredictable as a ride on a rodeo bull and over
seemingly as quickly.
Naturally, I was fascinated by the recent book, Daily Rituals: How Artists Work.
Author Mason Curry examines the schedules of 161 painters, writers, and
composers, as well as philosophers, scientists, and other exceptional
thinkers.
As I read, I became convinced that for these geniuses, a
routine was more than a luxury — it was essential to their work. As
Currey puts it, “A solid routine fosters a well-worn groove for one’s
mental energies and helps stave off the tyranny of moods.” And although
the book itself is a delightful hodgepodge of trivia, not a how-to
manual, I began to notice several common elements in the lives of the
healthier geniuses (the ones who relied more on discipline than on, say,
booze and Benzedrine) that allowed them to pursue the luxury of a
productivity-enhancing routine:
A workspace with minimal distractions.
Jane Austen asked that a certain squeaky hinge never be oiled, so that
she always had a warning when someone was approaching the room where she
wrote. William Faulkner, lacking a lock on his study door, just
detached the doorknob and brought it into the room with him — something
of which today’s cubicle worker can only dream.
Mark Twain’s family knew better than to breach his study door — if
they needed him, they’d blow a horn to draw him out. Graham Greene went
even further, renting a secret office; only his wife knew the address or
telephone number. Distracted more by the view out his window than
interruptions, if N.C. Wyeth was having trouble focusing, he’d tape a
piece of cardboard to his glasses as a sort of blinder.
A daily walk. For many, a regular daily walk was essential
to brain functioning. Soren Kierkegaard found his constitutionals so
inspiring that he would often rush back to his desk and resume writing,
still wearing his hat and carrying his walking stick or umbrella.
Charles Dickens famously took three-hour walks every afternoon — and
what he observed on them fed directly into his writing. Tchaikovsky made
do with a two-hour walk, but wouldn’t return a moment early, convinced
that cheating himself of the full 120 minutes would make him ill.
Beethoven took lengthy strolls after lunch, carrying a pencil and paper
with him in case inspiration struck. Erik Satie did the same on his long
strolls from Paris to the working class suburb where he lived, stopping
under streetlamps to jot down notions that arose on his journey; it’s
rumored that when those lamps were turned off during the war years, his
productivity declined too.
Accountability metrics. Anthony Trollope
only wrote for three hours a day, but he required of himself a rate of
250 words per 15 minutes, and if he finished the novel he was working on
before his three hours were up, he’d immediately start a new book as
soon as the previous one was finished. Ernest Hemingway also tracked his
daily word output on a chart “so as not to kid myself.” BF Skinner
started and stopped his writing sessions by setting a timer, “and he
carefully plotted the number of hours he wrote and the words he produced
on a graph.”
A clear dividing line between important work and busywork. Before there was email, there were letters. It amazed (and humbled)
me to see the amount of time each person allocated simply to answering
letters. Many would divide the day into real work (such as composing or
painting in the morning) and busywork (answering letters in the
afternoon). Others would turn to the busywork when the real work wasn’t
going well. But if the amount of correspondence was similar to today’s,
these historical geniuses did have one advantage: the post would arrive
at regular intervals, not constantly as email does.
A habit of stopping when they’re on a roll, not when they’re stuck.
Hemingway puts it thus: “You write until you come to a place where you
still have your juice and know what will happen next and you stop and
try to live through until the next day when you hit it again.” Arthur
Miller said, “I don’t believe in draining the reservoir, do you see? I
believe in getting up from the typewriter, away from it, while I still
have things to say.” With the exception of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart — who
rose at 6, spent the day in a flurry of music lessons, concerts, and
social engagements and often didn’t get to bed until 1 am — many would
write in the morning, stop for lunch and a stroll, spend an hour or two
answering letters, and knock off work by 2 or 3. “I’ve realized that
somebody who’s tired and needs a rest, and goes on working all the same
is a fool,” wrote Carl Jung. Or, well, a Mozart.
A supportive partner. Martha Freud, wife
of Sigmund, “laid out his clothes, chose his handkerchiefs, and even put
toothpaste on his toothbrush,” notes Currey. Gertrude Stein preferred
to write outdoors, looking at rocks and cows — and so on their trips to
the French countryside, Gertrude would find a place to sit while Alice
B. Toklas would shoo a few cows into the writer’s line of vision. Gustav
Mahler’s wife bribed the neighbors with opera tickets to keep their
dogs quiet while he was composing — even though she was bitterly
disappointed when he forced her to give up her own promising musical
career. The unmarried artists had help, too: Jane Austen’s sister,
Cassandra, took over most of the domestic duties so that Jane had time
to write — “Composition seems impossible to me with a head full of
joints of mutton & doses of rhubarb,” as Jane once wrote. And Andy
Warhol called friend and collaborator Pat Hackett every morning,
recounting the previous day’s activities in detail. “Doing the diary,”
as they called it, could last two full hours — with Hackett dutifully
jotting down notes and typing them up, every weekday morning from 1976
until Warhol’s death in 1987.
Limited social lives. One of Simone de
Beauvoir’s lovers put it this way: “there were no parties, no
receptions, no bourgeois values… it was an uncluttered kind of life, a
simplicity deliberately constructed so that she could do her work.”
Marcel Proust “made a conscious decision in 1910 to withdraw from
society,” writes Currey. Pablo Picasso and his girlfriend Fernande
Olivier borrowed the idea of Sunday as an “at-home day” from Stein and
Toklas — so that they could “dispose of the obligations of friendship in
a single afternoon.”
This last habit — relative isolation — sounds much less
appealing to me than some of the others. And yet I still find the
routines of these thinkers strangely compelling, perhaps they are so
unattainable, so extreme. Even the very idea that you can organize your
time as you like is out of reach for most of us — so I’ll close with a
toast to all those who did their best work within the constraints of
someone else’s routine. Like Francine Prose, who began writing when the
school bus picked up her children and stopped when it brought them back;
or T.S. Eliot, who found it much easier to write once he had a day job
in a bank than as a starving poet; and even F. Scott Fitzgerald, whose
early writing was crammed in around the strict schedule he followed as a
young military officer. Those days were not as fabled as the gin-soaked
nights in Paris that came later, but they were much more productive —
and no doubt easier on his liver. Being forced to follow the ruts of
someone else’s routine may grate, but they do make it easier to stay on
the path.
And that of course is what a routine really is — the path we take
through our day. Whether we break that trail yourself or follow the path
blazed by our constraints, perhaps what’s most important is that we
keep walking.
No comments:
Post a Comment