There’s a difference in energy between the feeling that drives us toward completion — the desire to take a project to fruition which might mean painstaking slogging through — and the more improvisational, playful pleasure of following creative energy into whatever space feels most free, active, and beckoning to our curiosity. How can we find ways to energize the process of revision with something equally light and alive even in the (possibly) slower work of reconsideration and rewriting? This light aliveness isn’t necessarily going to feel the same as that other exploratory energy. Can we summon a bodily mood that would help make the work of revision less like a slog? (Though often the slog feeling mostly pertains to the time around the actual writing of sentences, the time feeling one should be writing but isn’t.)
Could we sit down to write with a physical mood of exactitude and lightness? Start the transformation in our body and let it inflect the eye-hand-mind coordinations of actual writing? Shifting our idea of where the locus of clarity is, from in the writing to in our body?
To try this out, choose an entry point in your draft. Before writing, note for yourself what images and events are in play in that section. Try to feel an easy, wakeful, soft attentiveness in the way you inhabit your chair. Practice looking around the room with this soft attentiveness. Prime the mood by pausing your attention on sights or sounds within the room, lingering to take in the details, say, of the particular cast of light from the window onto the doorknob, or the angle at which your notebook is resting. Notice too how your spine is, how your shoulders are, how your eyeballs feel in their sockets, what your tongue is doing in your mouth, where your feet are resting.
Proceed into the rewriting, whether you are editing into your draft or writing into a fresh page, with a mood of careful exactitude and precision, tempered by gentleness. Refresh the mood by repeating the physical mood priming above as often as needed. Can you carry that feeling as you write, let it be a kind of underscoring to your writing session?