Imperatives

Last Updated on 17/08/2022

Written by Theodore Deppe, a poet. He also worked as a nurse in psychiatric hospitals.

  1. Begin with surprise, compress the narrative, make time for the lyric.
  2. Pay attention to the liminal space between dreaming and waking.
  3. Value the real questions more than the apparent answers.
  4. Prefer self-discovery to self-expression.
  5. Find the right balance between daily routines and the gifts of the unexpected.
  6. Take to the road and be at home everywhere.
  7. Walk whenever possible rather than pass by things in a moving vehicle.
  8. Plan, but do not over-plan.
  9. Pay attention to what’s most urgent inside you and then play with it, work with it, follow it where it must go.
  10. Fall in love with as many types of theatre, books, music, art, dance, and all the rest as possible.
  11. Love the everyday and the overlooked.
  12. Try not to be afraid of “the beautiful lightning”.
  13. Be part of a conversation that goes on over the centuries as to what good writing is, and about who we might be as human beings.
  14. Write about what resists explanation.
  15. Follow the road with the most energy.
  16. Listen to the scraps of conversation as people walk past you.
  17. Try to get eight hours of sleep each night.
  18. Be ready to stay up till morning when you find yourself inside a poem.
  19. Spend time at the gates of the unexplainable.
  20. Reread Dostoevsky and Elizabeth Bishop every ten years so they can speak to what is changing in you.
  21. Sense when a scene has peaked and stop there.
  22. Sense when an ending is coming too soon and stay open for a better one.
  23. Live the life you have been given to live, so you will not regret it later.
  24. Pay attention to those moments when your emotions seem inappropriate. Why do you want to laugh when the occasion seems sorrowful?
  25. Make sufficient time each day for your art. What lasts must come first.
  26. Don’t over explain.
  27. Write about what you love, and what you will lose, with as much passion and honesty as you can.
  28. Spend less time online.
  29. Spend more time reading great literature than you do reading the day’s news.
  30. Fail at all of this. Fail again. Then, as Samuel Beckett put it, fail better. Be grateful.