Do This Long Enough

Do This Long Enough

Pursue a single line, do this long enough, and there’s a gradual accretion of work that accumulates.

Some might say, “It’s a sign of the times.”

Mercury Misspelling
While my allegedly meticulous record keeping is somewhat spotty at best, there is the notion that I think I’ve been at the rock shop in rotational residency since summer of 2013, so that makes this nine point five years? Check my math on that one.

Over time, I was Sparkle Faire, Astrofish, and host of other names, not all useful in a family setting. I’ve been vilified, lambasted, poked, prodded, and yet, I’m still there.

Observed, early on in my career, I noted that there was high incidence of “professional burn-out” amongst readers. There was also the “Jah will provide, mon,” expression, in spirit if not in exact terms. These are two common problems.

The first, the “burn-out” is easy enough to remedy, and what I do is combination of ritual, prayer, psychic protection, self-care, and observed limits.

Rock-Shop-Sign

As a much younger person, I was able to do back-to-back readings all day and all night. I can’t really keep that pace these days. There’s only so much I’ve got to give away, and I want to look out for myself. Bundle that thought and its inherent limitations with that idea of psychic protection.

The good lord may be willing to help us out, but we have to do the footwork. That’s the other part of the equation.

But that idea of doing this long enough? Think of the concept of “10,000 hours” to learn and perfect a skill set. I’ve done way more than that by now.

None of this is really what I was driving towards, either. I was digging through the archives, looking for a different point, and I happened across that old Nature’s Treasures banner from Austin, complete with the typo.

Do This Long Enough

Doggedly pursue a single (somewhat nebulous) objective long enough? There is a gradual accumulation of material, some funny, some poignant, some riddled with typos. Some might be inappropriate.

Mercury Misspelling

Some might say, “It’s a sign of the times.”

Do This Long Enough

Do this long enough? I still haven’t found any “phychics.”

About the author: Born and raised in a small town in East Texas, Kramer Wetzel spent years honing his craft in a trailer park in South Austin. He hates writing about himself in third person. More at KramerWetzel.com.

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© 1993 – 2024 Kramer Wetzel, for astrofish.net &c. astrofish.net: breaking horoscopes since 1993.

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