
April’s Theme is Procrastinate
The things that we perpetually push to tomorrow’s to-do list can become a
mental weight. Even though we know the welcome relief that will wash
over us when that thing we’re avoiding is complete, still, we delay,
just a little while longer.
Procrastination can be a sort of art form: the art of deferred action.
It’s a technique that’s got a bad reputation, one often tinged with
shame. But it can also be a way to claim the ways you wish to your time.
It harbors creative possibilities, too.
In that game of waiting-waiting-waiting until it’s almost too late but
not quite, a coiled spring of potential energy hides, ready to leap into
action at a moment’s notice. Narrowing a timeline can be a fruitful
creative constraint, an exercise in trusting the unknown. When a window
of opportunity shrinks, improvisation and spontaneity might unfurl like a
flower in a time-lapse video blooming at super speed, a confetti cannon
of petals bursting in full color.
Our Turin chapter chose this month’s exploration of Procrastinate and Elisa Talentino illustrated it.