zed
noun \ˈzed\
the letter z
\Full Definition of ZED
chiefly British\
: the letter z
Origin of ZED
Middle English, from Middle French zede, from Late Latin zeta zeta, from Greek zēta
First Known Use: 13th century
How easy it is to write about the letter Z or as it is spelled here, ZED. The last letter of the alphabet. Some people always start from the beginning. Me, I often like to start from zed.
We all commence our story, our project, our life-work in the way best suited to us. Some start with an image, some with a song, some with a memory, some with a larger goal in mind. Some start in the middle. Some of us know the ending and want to find the beginning. Some muddle through and pull it together in a way only they can understand.
When I was an actress, we would talk about different acting techniques: inside out or outside in. The "inside out" method was most popular at that time, but I usually preferred the "outside in" approach - creating the outside character first and using that to discover the insides.
Sometimes I just can't make myself read a book from beginning to end; I start then skip to the end and then pick up again in the middle and read to the end. Sometimes I eat my dessert first. sometimes I think about what I want to say then figure out how to say it.
A few days ago, I was stuck in the middle of a mess; I had been in vacation mode for too long and I suddenly remembered I had deadlines. My desk was in an uproar; my projects were scattered in several rooms. I had a grant to write, a story to create, luggage to unpack, a program to plan. I needed to update my QuickBooks invoices and payments, and make good on promises made a while ago. What to do, what to do. After a period of what I judged to be justifiable panic, I took an action. I did the first thing in front of me. When that was finished I did the next thing that seemed if not logical then approachable. Then the next, and so on. I am still working my way out, just doing the next right thing, and I figure if I continue this way I will find my way to a new beginning.
How do you work? How do you live? Where do you start from?
Thanks to Harold Gardiner for his work on "Multiple Intelligences", and to Grant Wiggins for simplifying "Backwards Design."
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