If you do a practice and train your attention to hover in the present, then you will build the internal capacity to do that as needed - at will and voluntarily.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I do what I do, and I do it well, and focus and take it one moment at a time.
You can practice to learn a technique, but I'm more interested in conceiving of something in the moment.
I think it's probably a universal experience that all parents think they're not hovering, but perhaps we all are.
You focus on the things that you can control, and that's what I'm doing.
In my own work, I tend to cover a lot of time and to jump back and forward in time, and sometimes the way I do this is not very straightforward.
It's different for every project. Some parts are quicker than others to get and know; sometimes right up until the last moment you're just praying that something will click. But you can only do a certain amount of work and then at some point you've got to think: 'OK, I'm just going to have to leap now.'
I try to make songs visual and tactile to kind of put you into the action.
For a while I was thinking about moving the mouse with my hand.
When I'm on set, I do whatever I can to find my focus.
The lesson I learned is that sometimes the task you have at hand needs all of your concentration and focus.
No opposing quotes found.