It’s early morning on Tuesday 16th June and I’m feeling guilty. I didn’t paint yesterday. I have an excuse. It was a working day, and it was my birthday. By the time I got home from work the house was full with my 5 children and five grandchildren. They trickled away during the evening, then we went for a celebratory meal, I was tired and went to bed after everyone had left.Do I blame myself? No way. It was a special evening that I enjoyed very much.
But this is one of the downsides of the challenge. If you’re
not careful you can use it as an excuse to put pressure on yourself. I started
this year’s challenge on express pace, making 11 paintings by the end of the 7th
June. This put me 4 pictures ahead of the one a day schedule. By the 14th
I’d only managed another 6 paintings. This still meant I was three ahead. But
then not painting yesterday meant I finished the evening just 2 ahead, and this
morning I’m only 1 ahead, although I plan to paint when I get in this evening.
This is my problem. Once I’ve really got my teeth into a
challenge I get too driven and start to invest emotionally in it. On the one
hand this means when you complete then you get a huge satisfaction from it as
you do when you paint a painting you’re pleased with. But the other side of the
coin is that I start fretting that I’m not going to complete it, and that my
paintings are not as good as last year, etc. etc.
Now, the rational part of my brain says – so what? If you
don’t complete 30 by the end of 30th June, does it make the ones you’ve
done into worse paintings?! Of course, objectively, no it doesn’t, but the
obsessive completist in me wants them to be a really good AND complete set of
paintings.
The great Marc Taro Homes writes of getting over the hump
in the challenge, which I guess is like getting through the wall when you’re
running a marathon. I hope that this is my hump and I can get through it in the
next few days. If I can be at 20 by close of play on Friday Evening then I can’t
be too unhappy.


