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How Well are You
Maintaining Your "Creative Home"?
by Dan
Goodwin
Taking care of ourselves, doing all we can to maintain our creative
environments and abilities, is often the key to greater creativity.
This means enabling you to increase creativity in terms of quality as
well quantity.
Much like an old run-down house with poor central heating, rattling
windows and a leaky roof, if you don’t take care of yourself creatively
– and look after your Creative Home - then slowly and steadily
your creative energy will be wasted and you’ll be frustrated and
struggling to produce the kind of work you want to.
So here are five of the potential danger areas where your creative
energy may be trickling, or gushing, away from your Creative Home, and
how to combat them:
1. Too many windows open!
Problem- Having too many windows open – literally if you’re working on
a computer – can mean a dilution of your creative energy and focus. By
spreading yourself out too much and not concentrating on one or two
projects, you run the risk of being overwhelmed by how much there seems
to be for you to get on with. Essentially, you’ll experience the
paralysis of the “blank canvas effect” multiplied many times over.
Solution- Narrow your focus. Pick a maximum of three projects to work
on at any time, put any others you have away somewhere in a file or a
different room, somewhere not visible to you where you normally work.
Then pick the ONE creative project that means most to you right now,
and set yourself some goals in what you wish to achieve and a set time
period. Start small and build as you gain momentum.
For example if you’re writing a novel, you might set yourself the goal
of writing the opening two chapters within the next month. Or you may
wish to break it down further and set the goal of writing a page a day
for the next 5 days. You know yourself how you work best so tailor your
goals to suit you.
2. Not enough radiators!
Problem- People we mix with can be radiators – they radiate positive
energy and support you – or they can be drains – they literally drain
your positive energy with their negativity and criticism. Think about
the five people you spend most time with. How many of them are
radiators, who give out support and nurture your creativity, and how
many are drains, who relentlessly draw your creative energy from you?
Solution- Eliminate the drains, invest in more radiators. Once you’ve
identified how supportive or otherwise the people around you are, you
can take action. If you found that you even have one or two who are
draining your energy, replace them with radiators. Sometimes simply
explaining calmly and confidently to someone that you appreciate their
(negative) comments but are quite happy with the direction your heading
in, can stop their negativity.
If it doesn’t, cut out, or at least reduce, the time you spend with
them. Also, seek out additional people who will be supportive and
positive and who you can support too. Join or start a group in your
area or on the internet for people who are similarly want to increase
creativity and share your aspirations and ideas.
3. Depressing or uninspiring décor!
Problem- The area you do most of your creative work in is uninspiring
or worse is just plain depressing. The room is cold or draughty, your
chair’s uncomfortable, and the wallpaper you’ve had for the last 12
years is peeling away at the edges…
Solution- Have an interior makeover. Surround yourself and your
creative work area with décor that will energise and inspire.
For you this may mean calm neutral colours with a few well placed
pictures or quotes around you, or it might mean a glorious riot of
colours, images and textures.
Again, you know what works best for you, try different things and
notice how you respond in terms of how you increase creativity. Taking
a few hours to make your creative study or workspace more inspiring and
motivating will repay you many times over in greater creativity.
4. Poor security!
Problem- You have a poor “defence system” in place so when someone does
make a disparaging or negative comment about your work, you take it
badly and instantly doubt yourself and your creativity. You begin to
wonder why you’re bothering with this creative project at all and
whether you’ve got what it takes to be creative and produce significant
and interesting work.
Solution- Toughen up your defence system. This begins with developing
an awareness of when negativity creeps in, from others around you, as
well as from yourself. In addition to becoming more aware and stopping
negative thought cycles before they escalate, it makes sense to built
in some preventative measures to strengthen yourself too.
One of the most effect and widely used ways of building confidence and
self-belief is to use affirmations. These are simple statements that
you repeat to yourself many times over until they becoming imprinted in
your thoughts and replace and repel negative beliefs.
For example – “I am a highly creative.”, “My creative projects are
stimulating and worthwhile.”, “I am developing each day as a creative
artist.”. Use these and add more of your own. Remember though with
affirmations the key is to use them as often as possible, many times a
day at least.
5. Weak foundations or subsidence!
Problem- The very foundations of your Creative Home are in need of some
serious attention. Anything you attempt to build (create) is undermined
by a poor underlying structure. You stop and start creative projects
erratically and never really get going with anything.
Solution- Put solid foundations into place. There is still amongst many
creative people a belief that creativity comes in short hot bursts and
then disappears again, that they’re at the beck and call of some
mysterious and elusive muse.
In reality, the only way to produce consistently satisfying work is to
develop regular creative routines and habits. By doing a little each
day, over time we can all achieve amazing works creatively, rather than
spending days or even months on end simply waiting for the inspiration
to strike us again.
As well as setting aside time to create a little each day, even if only
for 15 minutes each morning, go out and actively seek new ideas and
inspiration from the world around you. And this inspiration can of
course take many forms. If you’re a painter it doesn’t mean you can
only be motivated to create by seeing other paintings. Seek out all
kinds of art and creative endeavours and build the strongest
foundations possible for your Creative Home.
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©
Copyright 2006 Dan Goodwin.
Creativity Coach Dan Goodwin is the author of “Create Create!”, a FREE
twice monthly ezine for people who want simple and powerful articles,
tips and exercises to help them unleash their creative talents. Sign up
right now and get your FREE “Explode Your Creativity!” Action Workbook,
at http://www.CoachCreative.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Dan_Goodwin
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