What Limitation & Differences Make Possible
<h1>Limitation #1: Time</h1>
<p>I got the idea to continue from yesterday, because of my limitation and because I am doing this with Becky. My limitation is that I have to finish it within about 22 minutes. Either I could declare it done. Which I did with the others. Or I could go back and make what was done yesterday, into something else today.</p>
<h1>You can expand time.</h1>
<p>I got this idea from Becky who sent me pictures of work that she was in the process of making, the latest thing she’d done.</p>
<p><strong>But, to change you have to be wiling to let go of what’s good.</strong></p>
<p>What if I were to do that with my wonky heart, yesterday’s doodle. This would require I change it in a way that I couldn’t erase, possibly making it worse, not better than what currently existed.</p>
<p>To change what I’d completed yesterday I had to be willing to take it apart. That is hard for me because I struggle so with completion.</p>
<p>I am afraid to ruin something I’ve done that’s okay, because I am afraid that is as good as it can get. I don’t believe, that doing something different, and likely ruining it — undoing what I did before, or redoing it differently — will produce something better.</p>
<p><strong>Good or evolving?</strong></p>
<p>You can be an artist either way — choosing to do what you know to be good — or you can choose to keep experimenting, trying new things, and see where you end up. To be this kind of an artist, you have to believe that your pursuit isn’t for good, for being good, for being perceived to be good, but to answer a question you are asking yourself. Art is your medium, you way to travel. Though you make things that take you to the next stop. There is no end, only an endless dance.</p>
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