Knowledge
The gaining of knowledge
deteriorates with age
because we know
everything at 18
and realise
we know nothing
the older
we become
What Makes Your Life Extraordinary?
In Dead Poet’s Society, Mr Keating takes the boys to the hallway to see the photos of past students and whispers the immortal lines, “Carpe diem. Seize the days, boys. Makes your lives extraordinary.”
A current television commercial runs the slogan, “Escape ordinary.”
What makes a life extraordinary?
People buy into this idea of your life having to be a Broadway extravaganza or a Hollywood blockbuster ALL. THE. TIME.
We are presented with hyper-idealised notions of reality. Do life BIGGER, BETTER, FASTER, LOUDER, MORE DEMONSTRATIVE, IN YOUR FACE and (dare I use it because I hate the acronym) YOLO! It’s perfectly captured in the Selfie Generation: LOOK AT ME, I’M IMPORTANT AND I DESERVE YOUR ATTENTION.
It is the wrong perspective.*adjusts cardigan and puts on slippers*
What’s wrong with ordinary? Ordinary is where I live and find my inspiration. I joke my life is coloured beige for boring, making my life extra ordinary.
For the creative person, extraordinary is a way to burn out because it demands you give out so much more of yourself than is returning to you.
“The candle that burns twice as bright burns half as long.”
For me as a writer, the greatest stories are not the ones we see in films, the lives of movie stars, but in the embarrassing ordinariness of people doing things in their every day lives that benefits others. The ones who don’t see their work as anything important; they are filling a need, taking care of their community, advocating for the poor and disadvantaged. Living an extraordinary life is one lived in service of others and pursing your own dreams. Balancing the self with the care of others. Telling their story is an extraordinary privilege.
I like to think of the word as “extra-ordinary.” The one thing that defines the ordinary from the extraordinary is passion. Mr Keating exhorted his young charges to engage with the aspects of life that they were passionate about.
For the creative person, the passion manifests itself in the choice of medium whether it’s writing, art or music.
As it relates to creativity, to continually produce great art, to live an extra ordinary life, requires repetition, ritual and reflection.
Not once, not twice, not even thrice but continually and habitually. Continue to produce art: write regularly; sketch, doodle, scribble whenever possible; practice scale and rudiments.
Repetition can become staid and uninspiring so it requires a dedication and committed work ethic to maintain your focus on being creative.
Early efforts will be complete and utter rubbish. But that’s the point of repetition: you do it until you get better.
Setting aside an assigned time to work on your creative project is like attending church or settling onto the couch to watch your favourite television show or sport team compete. Like repetition, it is a repeated event but the goal is one of individual development.
Ritual provides structure and is an active reminder to develop a disciplined approach to our creativity.
Movement without reflection will only end up with you moving in a circular fashion, only ever returning to the starting point without having learned or progressed.
Every once in a while it is important to reflect on your goals, your progress in terms of work produced and skills developed. Are you improving? Has anything weakened? What else do you need to know?
Creativity makes your life extraordinary because you have embraced repetition, ritual and reflection. You are taking the ordinariness of life and giving it meaning through creating great art.
This makes you extraordinary.
Addendum: This morning in the shower (place of many great epiphanies along with the kitchen sink while washing up) I had another idea to add. It was the one thing that makes a life extraordinary: Relationship.
Without relationship, we are merely individuals without community and connection. In relationship with other creative people we make our lives extraordinary because we have companionship, connection and community. We are no longer alone. This is fundamental in making our lives extraordinary.
Posted in Creativity, The Writer's Life
Tagged art, creativity, extraordinary, fiction, just because of thoughtfulness, life in general, music, poetry, slice of life, writers, writing, writing tips
The key to unlocking creativity is asking good questions.
There is no singular question, like having the key to a cupboard, to unlock creativity. It’s more like being given a set of keys to unlock many cupboards, boxes, safes, vaults and the little box you thought you’d forgotten about.
When you know which key unlocks which box, you have an opportunity to develop your creative skills.
Non-creative people, those who are yet to understand that they too, can BE a creative person, look on in wonder and ask, “Where do you get your ideas from?” They are looking at the key in their hand and using it to dig the wax out of their ears or stir the milk and sugar into their cup of tea.
Last year I wrote 11 Facetious (and 1 Serious) Answers to the Question, “Where Do You Get Your Ideas?”
The question is a default position where the person does not believe they can be a creative person, and they are seeking out a secret formula to unlock the means to creativity. The non-creative person thinks, “If only I had an idea I could be creative.” There is a two-fold belief system happening. First, I can’t be creative and second, I just need an idea and I’ll be creative.
These two belief systems stem from a lack of belief in a person’s ability to be creative. It gives the non-creative person an excuse NOT to do something, because they don’t believe they can generate an idea nor do they believe they have the skills to be creative. They compare themselves to others and think, “I can never be as creative as Person A or Person Z.”
For the creative person, the generation of ideas varies. Some have no problem finding ideas, others select their ideas judiciously while still others discover their ideas like diamonds, digging through layers and layers until they strike upon it.
Questions, Questions, Questions
The key to being creative lies in asking good questions. What those questions are will vary from person to person, and from medium to medium.
The writer may not ask the same question as the painter, or the photographer may not ask the same question as the musician.
There are two fundamental questions that all creative people ask:
What is the purpose of this work?
Who is my intended audience?
Beyond these basic questions, creative types need impetus and direction. To develop a creative life we need to ask questions that begin with “What…?” or “How…?” or “Why…?”
In the search for understanding about what it means to be creative, to understand how a creative person generates ideas, we must ask good questions; ones that provide momentum and direction to our creative endeavours. Good questions help us understand our creative processes and build good creative habits.
If you have ever wanted to be creative, learn to ask good questions to help unlock your creativity and have a fulfilling creative life.
What questions would you ask to unlock your creativity?
Posted in Creativity, The Writer's Life
Tagged creativity, creativity tips, how to be creative, life in general, slice of life, writers, writing, writing tips
Creative people are afraid of failure, and too often we fear our creative process and creative ability. In the last two weeks I’ve explored this in: Why Are Creative People Afraid of Failure and Creative People: Fear Not.
In the words of Inigo Montoya, “Let me explain. There is too much; let me sum up.”
Every writer and creative person will define it differently, but at the core, failure is a sense of inability to reconcile the imagined world and the real world, seeing the shortfall between the expectation and reality.
Failure is not an absolute. It is teaching and learning process, and a creative tool.
When we are afraid, fearful of creating, we need to trust in our abilities and skills, our planning and the quality of work.
Turn the fear into a motivating factor. Let it become a driving force.
Turn your fear into excitement. It’s the same chemical in the brain; different interpretation.
Don’t let the fear defeat you.
Summary completed, let’s move on.
When we create we are afraid of failure.
When we create we are afraid of rejection.
If we let the fear of failure consume our creative lives, we become hollow, desolate shells.
Creating anything artistic has within in it a risk of rejection; it is inevitable. It is another aspect of feeling like a failure when a story does not find a publisher, an artwork is rejected for an exhibition or a film is poorly received.
As creative people we feel the emotional knock down of rejection particularly hard. It undermines our ability to create and produce, makes us question our vision and belief in our abilities. Rejection can compound the feeling of failure, a double dose of sucker-punch. Rejection can be demoralising and quench the creative spark that burns within you.
Rejection will happen. It’s how we cope with rejection that will define our creativity. In the face of fear, failure and rejection it is our ability to be resilient, the ability to “bounce back” from adversity and stress.
My writing partner, Jodi Cleghorn, pointed me to this article from The Huffington Post:
“Resilience is practically a prerequisite for creative success, says Kaufman. Doing creative work is often described as a process of failing repeatedly until you find something that sticks, and creatives — at least the successful ones — learn not to take failure so personally.
“Creatives fail and the really good ones fail often,” Forbes contributor Steven Kotler.”
We know we are going to fail and have our work rejected. When we are resilient in the face of failure and rejection we will produce creative works that are more in balance with our ideal world and the real world, closing the gap between expectation and reality.
How can a creative person build resilience in their creative life in the face of fear, failure and rejection?
1. Believe in the skills and talents you have
If you have invested the time into developing, refining and improving your creative skills, trust that you will continue to create good art.
Always be a learner of your craft. Continually seek ways to improve your writing by writing in a different genre or painting in a different medium. Get feedback from trusted people.
2. Know the vision you have for your creative work
I created a manifesto to give me vision for the type of stories I want to tell. I revisit it from time to time as a reminder. One day I will perhaps amend it as my creative journey continues, to reflect the change and development of my work.
3. Set regular goals
The SMART Plan (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Time-framed) is a great way of tracking your progress regardless of rejection. It keeps you focused on producing, not being bogged down by rejection. Every piece of new work is a step closer to achieving and fulfilling your goals.
My goals are worked out month to month. It’s short and specific and allows me flexibility with the demands of my day job. I have a big picture of the next few years of where I want to go and what I want to do, but I allow enough flexibility for change.
4. Develop a strong creative network
Everyone needs a cheer squad; someone to put on the rah-rah skirt and wave the pom poms when you’re feeling flat, dejected and uninspired.
I have a small, closed group on Facebook, made up of writers of different shapes and forms and it is a positive environment to seek feedback, preview new work or have a whinge. We live in different parts of Australia but the online connection means we champion each others’ causes.
5. Look for the positives
Whack on a pair rosy coloured glasses, preferably with a Dame Edna vibe to it, and look at your work in a positive light. As a writer it is too easy to look at all the errors when editing rather than see the fantastic sentences or paragraphs surrounding the small errors.
Fear is natural when we are uncertain, in doubt or under stress.
Failure is not a negative experience but a teaching tool.
Rejection comes with the creative territory if we are putting our work out there for our audience.
Resilience says, “You are a creative individual” and tells you, “You can do it.” It picks you up, often by the scruff of the neck, dusts you off, smacks you on the bum and tells you to, “Get out there and try again.”
How do you develop resilience as a creative person?
Posted in Creativity, The Writer's Life
Tagged creating, creativity, failure, fear, fiction, just because of thoughtfulness, life in general, rejection, resilience, slice of life, writers, writing
Sense of Wonder
should I ever lose
my sense of wonder
at the occurrence
of the everyday:
a pencil, socks, books, hugs
the child in me
is lost
The Only Proof
the only proof
I ever existed
was meeting
a stranger’s eyes
acknowledgment of
another presence
for the length
of a heartbeat
The Act of Creation
When I create
I destroy
The pencil dulls
The paper soiled
What I have destroyed
Is a crucible
For the phoenix
To live again
Posted in Ars Poetica, Creativity
Tagged creativity, experimental, just because of thoughtfulness, life in general, microfiction, micropoetry, poetry, slice of life, writers, writing
I am going to say the F-word. It’s not a word we like to hear, nor is it a word we like to use. It exists in our vocabulary but it is very rarely used.
I’m going to say it. Ready?
Failure.
Now, tell me, how do you feel? And remember, this is for posterity, so please, be honest (Thank you, Count Rugen, you six-fingered man of wisdom).
A recurrent refrain is, “I feel like I failed,” said with the tone of negativity intimating it has the finality of death.
I feel like I have failed. I look back over the last year and the first few months of this year and I have failed. I have failed in achieving what I wanted to achieve. I did not meet my writing goals. I did not meet my reading goals. I look over recent writing and now think it stinks worse than the night after a hotdog and baked bean eating contest.
The stereotype of the artistic person as a neurotic, shambolic, ridden-with-fear and afraid of being called a fraud is prevalent in my social media feeds. I see many writers and creative people who declare their insecurities and fears, and I’m no different.
We are afraid of failing.
For example, my collaborative writing partner, Jodi Cleghorn, spoke at her editing workshop, and elaborated on by Delia Strange (How To Stop Hating Your Manuscript) that when you’re editing, you are looking for the faults and problems. It does make you feel like your work is something filthy you’ve stepped in and fit only to be scraped from the bottom of a shoe and discarded. It feels like failure.
The attitude must change.
Recognise the positive attributes of your work, and be aware that you are there to fix the negatives, not be defined by them.
The fear of failure needs to be put to pasture with the myth of the muse.
I see in the students I teach a distinct fear of failure. They would rather not complete a task, therefore failing, rather than attempt the task and risk knowing their work is only worth a Pass. It reinforces their sense of self worth and perception of their ability.
The issue for my students is they cannot see how disciplined effort, feedback and commitment to learning can improve the quality of their work, improve their sense of self worth and individuality.
What constitutes ‘failure’?
Every writer and creative person will define it differently but at the core is a sense of inability to reconcile the imagined world and the real world, seeing the shortfall between the expectation and reality.
Whatever measure you have used against yourself, whether it’s word count, project completion, editing, planning, plotting, the discrepancy between “achieved” and “not achieved” will be interpreted as failure.
What do you do when you feel like you have failed?
Rethink the definition and the perception of what failure is.
When I look at business people and entrepreneurs, their definition of failure is different to that of a stereotypical creative person. They see failure not as an absolute, but as an opportunity.
Failure is always an option. I love seeing it on the Mythbusters t-shirts. Failure is an opportunity for teaching (if you are willing to be taught).
As writers, our characters are faced with failure and disappointment but they learn, or fail to learn from their experience. It is what makes a narrative engaging. Why can’t we learn from our characters and look at our creative endeavours as learning experiences?
Failure is not an absolute.
Failure is teaching and learning process.
Failure is a creative tool.
Let’s start speaking positively about ourselves and understand our failures do not define who we are.
Our perceived failures help us to refine our work, develop our creative skills and in the words of Neil Gaiman, “Create good art.”
It is not our failures that will speak for us but the quality of our creativity.
Fear not.
Posted in Creativity, The Writer's Life
Tagged creativity, failure, just because of thoughtfulness, life in general, poetry, slice of life, writers, writers' woes, writing