People come into the Carmelite Library to read: journals,
study notes, books whose page numbers are carefully recorded from one visit to
the next. What motivates them? What is motivation, which must have something to do with
movement? Is it an external force — to get out of the wind and rain — or an
internal compulsion, like the body’s need to sit down for awhile?
How much
motivation is physical, how much mental? Our thoughts swim in a chemical bath:
so do our feelings. When we say we’re not motivated, do these chemicals wash
about due to the presence of light, darkness, or wild weather? My dogs aren’t
motivated to lift one paw on a cold wet morning.
Lack of
motivation can be fuelled by expectation. Not only today, but in our life
frame, we want to fill out the picture and achieve something splendid. But
somehow the motivation isn’t there: the getting moving. If you can’t equal or
surpass your heroes — or even the child next door — you lose hope. Our culture
that demands so much may often give back little. What motivates someone to keep
practicing the piccolo for hours every day? Maybe he likes the sound.
Motivation
comes easier when the aim is clear and the reward constant. I’m motivated to go
to work to pay my bills, for example. I seem to be less motivated to exercise
to improve my health. Is the goal too diffuse, or the reward uncertain? Maybe
both, in my case.
What if we
were motivated to do exactly what we want? Seriously. You think you should be
motivated to clean the floor, but the idea dismays you so much you want to sit
down and cry. So cry. You should be motivated to cook dinner, but you want to
relax and watch a film instead. So eat another breakfast today. You’d like to
be motivated to practice the piccolo, but you need more sleep than you ever
get. So sleep. The piccolo isn’t going anywhere.
Some things
are nearly always motivating. You can do them sitting in an armchair. Look
around: you’ll be motivated to praise God. Think about the state of the world:
you’ll want to ask for blessings on everyone you know, and everyone you don’t
know, too. Prepare yourself to stand witness to the truth, in whatever form
that may take on the day that you get moving.
When the
reader left the library, she spoke to me. She said: “It’s a peaceful place to
be.”