When we create, we come alive; we’re making love to life. We use our
unique talents, perception and skills and make the intangible tangible.
Most of us generally know what we want in life. For every person, the
answer to what brings us joy will be unique. For some it’s playing
guitar or dancing. For others it’s writing, hiking, spending time with
family, photography, or drawing.
So if we know what makes us feel alive, why do we resist it? Why do we avoid doing what we love to do?
I think there’s a number of reasons that can help us explain this
elusive phenomenon. Hopefully in discovering the blocks toward pursuing
what is dearest to us, we can overcome them.
So why do we resist?
1. The inability to accept imperfections. Do you
think that Mona Lisa was Da Vinci’s first painting? We think, if it’s
not perfect, why bother? But when we pursue the creative act, it’s
crucial that we suspend judgment. After all, you can always cull the
fluff and ridiculous later.
What to do instead? Resist your temptation to have
everything figured out before you start. Failure is fundamental to the
creative process. If you don’t fail, you’ll never improve. Suspend your
judgment and remember that whatever you don’t like, you can always take
out or re-do.
2. Not respecting the gestation of improvement. Say
you have a passion for dancing. The only problem is, you’d make a blind
man cry. Remember that mastery of any art or skill takes time. No one
starts out being a natural Michael Jackson. And anyway, look what fame
did to him. Are you sure you want that?
What’s a poor Napoleon Dynamite to do? Respect the fact that
mastering any skill takes time. Instead of thinking about all the
things that aren’t right, think about what you can do now to improve.
3. Not accepting your creative identity. All great artists, poets, musicians and creators, excelled by accepting their artistic identity. The truth is, we are all artists. We’re creating the story of our life in each moment. We’re not just humans living, we’re artists shaping a story. Accepting your identity as an artist is accepting your creative nature.
3. Not accepting your creative identity. All great artists, poets, musicians and creators, excelled by accepting their artistic identity. The truth is, we are all artists. We’re creating the story of our life in each moment. We’re not just humans living, we’re artists shaping a story. Accepting your identity as an artist is accepting your creative nature.
So how can we gain the confidence to accept out creative identity? The
biggest block toward your acceptance of your creative nature is
probably due to self-judgment. How can you possibly accept that you are a
writer when you haven’t hit the bestseller list? While external
affirmations are important, the approval of your heart is equally
important. If you feel in your heart that you are born to be an athlete,
but don’t have Magic Johnson’s skills, that’s okay. What matters is
that you feel deeply in your heart that is what you want. It makes you
come alive.
4. We’ve turned our passion into work. Anytime you
feel that you must do something, you lose inspiration. You lose your
sense of excitement. In our society and in general, we have a clearly
separate work and play. “Work hard, play hard!” is a common motto people
tell others to make them feel a little better about their drudgery. We
don’t have to dread work, it’s a choice. That’s the problem when our
passion has also become our work. We tend to think it’s our passion has
become something we must do. There’s no fun in that.
What can we do to re-ignite our passion? We need to get our
heart back in it. Spend 15 minutes just visualizing what you want to
create. Think about how it makes you feel. How does it make your body
feel? What excites you about it? Think about all the reasons you wanted
to do it in the first place. If you feel the urge to start working on
it, hold yourself back until the 15 minutes are over.
This a great tool for realigning yourself and remember the reason you
started in the first place. Sometimes our mind tends to overpower the
heart. It’s our logical faculty after all right? Using this exercise
helps us re-align ourselves.
Lost in Space
The truth is, we’re often the most productive when what we’re doing
has absolutely no purpose. We come alive when we’ve lost track of time,
doing what we love.
Perhaps its not our weakness, but our greatness that we fear the most.
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