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Deborah J. Brasket, feeling in the flow of things, finding balance, Flow, harmony, in the zone, inspiration, life, meditation, mental health, mountain-top experiences, Nature, one with the universe, Papeete, personal, poetry, Tahiti, travel, writing

Have you ever felt being in the flow of things? That optimum experience that many athletes and artists feel when time disappears and everything you are doing just seems to click effortlessly into place?
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, who has written extensively on flow, calls it “an almost automatic, effortless, yet highly focused state of consciousness” in which you “become, at least temporarily, part of a larger entity” or even “at one with the harmony of the cosmos.”
I’ve experienced this a few times for extended periods, but most often only for brief moments. The type of flow usually comes after long periods of meditation, usually when I’m outside, immersed in nature, when thoughts cease and sights and sounds flow through me. “Mountain-top” moments you might call them. But occasionally, more rarely, they happen in the “market place,” unexpectedly, in the middle of a busy day. I love it when that happens.
On the Mountain Top
The first extended period of this came when we were sailing in the South Pacific. We were anchored in a cove off Tahiti and I went ashore to do some shopping.
I felt unusually light-headed, as if walking on air, or as if some filter called “me” had disappeared, and all that was left was this crystal clear awareness taking in everything and everyone I met—that “not-two” feeling I mentioned at the end of my last post on ‘Lightness of Being.” That sense stayed with me during the bus ride to Papeete and slowly dissipated as I went about my shopping.
I wrote a poem about the experience when I returned home, focusing on the bus ride. When sitting in the open-sided bus looking out at the passing landscape that sense of “flow” was especially intense.
On a Bus to Papeete
Wind through the window
Streaming through my hair
I in my stillness
Hurtling through the air
Trees and grasses and roads bending
Faces with flowers and houses blending
Objects like petals on a dark stream,
streaming through me, leave me
Clean and empty as a hollow reed, still
faintly tingling with the rhapsody of being.
–by Deborah J. Brasket
In the Marketplace
It happened another time when we had returned home from our voyage and I was working as a manager of a small popular family restaurant. It was Sunday morning and we were slammed. Folks were lined up out the door waiting to be seated. The hostess was going crazy trying to keep up with the demand, scribbling down names and crossing them off, leading couples and families to tables, bringing out highchairs and crayons and coloring books, taking out trays of water.
The waitresses were buzzing around the room taking orders, pouring drinks, balancing up to six plates at a time in their arms. The poor busboys were clearing tables as fast as they could, wiping them down, hauling cartloads of dishes back to the kitchen. Things were at a fever high pitch of frantic in the back of the house too, as cooks called out orders, slapped slabs of bacon and sausage on the griddle, flipped pancakes, whisked eggs.
And I was everywhere at once, making the rounds, helping out as I moved along, taking around coffee, refilling cups, chatting up the guests, helping to clear tables and seat people, checking up on missing orders, lending a hand to the stack of avocados that needed peeling to make up a new batch of guacamole.
Everywhere at once, acutely attuned to what was needed in the moment and filling in the gap, just streaming along, light-headed, calm, exuberant, being all things at once and nothing at all, just letting the ebb and flow of activity move me along, marveling even while in the midst of it, at how natural, spontaneous, hyper-aware, hyper-alive I felt.
It lasted all morning and well into the early afternoon. Then as the stream of guests faded, and the restaurant began to empty, so did the “high,” that sense of flow, and I was gently landed back on the ground again, normal me, but not a bit tired and still very happy.
A Balancing Act
Now most of the time I feel I’m being carried along mid-stream, not “in the flow” at the center as I was then, but skirting it, somewhere between the flow and the swirling eddies at the edge of the stream. It’s a pleasant place to be, knowing the “flow” is right there beside me, ready to whisk me away again when I’m ready and things are just right.
But happy too that I’m avoiding for the most part those pesky eddies that try to pull me away into the shallows—-those petty, tiresome swirls, and fearful spins, and down-spouts of grief and anger that are always there, ready to pull me under and upside-down when they can. Usually I am able to scramble free easier than I have in the past, knowing that whatever trouble in the world they represent is more easily solved when I’m not tumbling around in the turmoil.
Mostly it’s a balancing act, trying to bring those mountaintop moments into the marketplace and finding myself somewhere in between. Not an unpleasant place to be.
When have you felt in the flow of things?
[This was first posted years ago under slightly different titles. I turn to this poem and others like it when wanting to return to that state of mind of being in the flow. Things are rather chaotic in my life right now, promoting my debut novel while getting my second novel ready to publish. On the personal level, things are a bit hectic too since my teenage grandson has moved in with us, my daughter furloughed in the shutdown and wondering if she’ll have a job when it’s over, and a son still struggling to find his place in the world. With all this going on, I’m too struggle to keep at that midpoint place in the stream of things and not get pushed into the eddies. Still seeking to bring those mountain-top experiences down into the market-place and onto the home front.]
Often I felt myself in “the flow of things” while writing When Things Go Missing, as did some of my characters: Cal when he was welding and creating his metal sculptures, Kay when as a child she was wrapped in her mother’s arms, and Walter when he was flyfishing in Salmon Creek. I hope you will get a chance to spend some time with them. When Things Go Missing is now available at Amazon, Bookshop, Barnes & Noble and other major retailers.
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Lovely post!
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Thank you, Dawn!
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Lovely poem and descriptions of flow Deborah. It’s been a while since I’ve felt the flow. It seems more like waiting on the shore or sitting in the eddies these days.
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I’m glad you enjoyed this, Brad. The eddies have been capturing me too from time to time lately. But when I visit your blog and see your photography and poems, it always brings me back to the center a little more.
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Thank you. 🙂
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You are so welcome.
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I love this paragraph, Deborah:
“Everywhere at once, acutely attuned to what was needed in the moment and filling in the gap, just streaming along, light-headed, calm, exuberant, being all things at once and nothing at all, just letting the ebb and flow of activity move me along, marveling even while in the midst of it, at how natural, spontaneous, hyper-aware, hyper-alive I felt.”
I never made the connection to Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi’s “flow”, but I see it in your words. I’ve had experiences where I’ve felt I disconnected from myself, energy zigging and zagging to people around me and while it was disconcerting, it was also pretty fabulous. Like a rush? One I can’t command or control.
I can totally see how you found flow as you wrote about Cal, especially. Yes!
xo! 💝
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Ahh, thank you Vicki. Yes, it is a bit like a rush as you say, especially when it happens while surrounded by activity. “Rush” really does describe how I felt at the restaurant that day. Even in the bus, too. You can’t command or control it, as you say. It’s a kind of gift.
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Thank you so much for sharing. Love this piece! 💝
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My pleasure, always!
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I think I’m more of a pause and look around type of person. 😊
But this is a beautiful line:
“stillfaintly tingling with the rhapsody of being.”
And I can relate to that!
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Thank you, Merril. So glad that resonated with you. That’s one of my favorite lines too.
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You’re welcome, Deborah!
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I miss the flow that happens when I’m writing or out in nature. I’m caught in the maelstrom of the political mess, I’m afraid.
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Yes, all the political turmoil makes it so much harder.
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Great post, I’ve had moments or days/nights that I remember where it felt like this and I’ll never forget them
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Thanks Beth. You are so right. It’s not something you forget.
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Love this post. A balancing act… oh I get it completely Deborah. Well said😎😎😎
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I’m not surprised you get it, Brian! So nice to see you here. Thanks for stopping by.
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I try to get out and check out other blogs. I gotta comment more. Really rude of me. And yes, love when we get in those flow moments!!!!
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Flow is elusive. I’ve experienced it when doing something creative, like singing or writing. I need more of it!
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It is! It seems to emerge in those deeply creative moments. So happy to see you here, Michelle. (I found you in my spam folder and rescued you!)
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There seems to be no rhyme or reason to when WordPress sends comments to spam. 😂
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Yes, I have. 🙂 It is the normal state of awareness, I believe. And our frequent dissociation from it is pathological. One sees and knows this when one is “in it”.
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I’d like to believe that too, because when I’m in the flow it feels so natural, like I’ve tapped into a more authentic sense of being, a larger self, so to speak.
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Loved reading this, Deborah. You really describe that feeling of flow so well, especially in the section as a restaurant manager during hours of tending to many customers.
BTW, a small typo in this sentence: With all this going on, I’m too struggle to keep at that midpoint place in the stream of things and not get pushed into the eddies.
Either write:
With all this going on, I too struggle to keep at that midpoint place…
Or,
With all this going on, I’m also struggling to keep at that midpoint place…
Ken
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Thanks, Ken. I appreciate your proofing expertise. I’m looking for a good proofreader for my next novel, if that is of interest to you.
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How do you see that working?
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I’ll email you.
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I have sometimes felt the exact way you describe here so wonderfully,
Everywhere at once, acutely attuned to what was needed in the moment and filling in the gap, just streaming along, light-headed, calm, exuberant, being all things at once and nothing at all, just letting the ebb and flow of activity move me along, marveling even while in the midst of it, at how natural, spontaneous, hyper-aware, hyper-alive I felt.
and it made me realize that perhaps the secret of being “happy” or in that state of beautifully oblivious flow, is in fact always being busy doing something. Something not necessarily that we have as a job, or that we are passionate about or talented at, just… any kind of “something”, to keep us from thinking too much.
Our mind is a quite mischievous “creature” and when we keep busy, I feel the mind gets suspended a bit more and for longer, so perhaps we end up simply being, not thinking of it too much, if at all. No past, no future, no wondering, no assessing… simply existing, doing what is to be done… our sense of ego, or the self, blissfully suspended, so all that remains is that flow of things… that carries us off and away with it.
I have recently purchased a book, Ikigai, it is called, and indeed the Japanese take on it also seems to be… “never retire”, always keep busy doing something, and… as you said, balance, in all things. And children are in that state so much more often, as they take in the world as a wonder, something not yet defined, unlimited and diffuse… fully immersed in it, belonging to it, unlike grown ups, who have been “taught” to detach, evaluate, interpret, judge, label… uf, and eventually having to override all that, mindfully now, in order to regain that sense of peace and quiet within, and balance… and joy. Beyond the egoic mind, ultimately.
I am sorry for such a long comment. Thank you for such a lovely post!
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I love your long comment, Nicole. I think you are onto something with your thoughts about being too busy in the moment to have a sense of ego or past or future, but totally immersed in the moment. That was true with both of the experiences I wrote about here. Even in other moments of flow when I wasn’t busy doing anything, I was busy so to speak just BEING. Being present. Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts here.
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Your descriptions of those “flow” moments are insightful, Deborah. They’re times of perfect alignment, I think. Somewhat rare. I feel those flow moments when I’m on mountaintops, Deborah. There’s something about the exertion and the reward that makes we feel connected, blissful, and just where I need to be. I’m usually a trial and error gal, so those times when things just seem to flow without a hitch are delightful.
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“Perfect alignment,” I like that, Diane. Those mountain-top moments are easier for me to get to, too. But when it does all come together, it is like a delightful gift, as you say. Thanks so much for sharing this!
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