Befriending Your Creativity

By: Jen Louden
Submitted: 2007-01-17 16:39:52
Print this article | Tell a friend | For publisher | Social Bookmarking
Rating:
 

Do you secretly hold an “ascetic self-flagellant, it-must-be-hard-to-be-good, that’s for other people” attitude about your creativity?

(Don't waste your time telling me you aren't creative--life is the ultimate creative act and you are alive, or else you wouldn't be reading this).

Self-care and creativity are best friends--one cannot exist without the other. Yet we don't often think about befriending, romancing, inveigling our creativity. Instead we:

* Compare our efforts to others. (Look at the colors she uses in her knitting.)

* Raise the bar. (I said I would write for 15 minutes and I did but you know, Toni Morrison writes for longer than 15 minutes and so 15 minutes isn't good enough and I'll never amount to anything and...)

* Fight with our work. (Paint, if you would just do what I what you to, we wouldn't have any problems. I hate you, paint!)

* Run from the creative energy in our bodies. (Oh I'm feeling so much, wow, I can't take this, I better go clean the kitchen.)

* Indulge in shadow comforts to soothe away comparisons and self-criticism, and to ground our energy. (Cookies are very grounding.)

For years, I've been actively researching and experimenting with ways to make creating effortless, joyful, and fun. Here are three ways I use to create--writing, parenting, life--with a light heart and a saunter in my step. See what you think.

1) Be a servant of the universe

Right before my first book was to be published, The Woman's Comfort Book, I called Conari Press to ask about a resource, published by their house, that I was quoting. Years later I learned my casual phone call had caused quite a stir. Conari was about to bring out a book from the beloved author Sue Thoele entitled, The Woman's Book of Comfort.

Now some people would read this and say, "See, ideas are everywhere and you have to grab first and work secretly and fast or someone will get there first." I couldn't disagree more. I believe the collective unconscious, the cultural Zeitgeist, the mind of God -- whatever you want to call it -- is an endlessly infinite source of creative energy equally available to us all.

If you hoard your ideas, if you hold onto them too tightly, or if you fall in love with a certain expression of your creativity (a particular title or that your idea has to be expressed only as an opera never as a one woman show) you stymie the creative flow. You limit your gift. You increase fear and decrease productivity.

Instead, do what Katherine Olivetti, MSSW, suggests: "If you take the stance that you are the steward of the words, the servant of the universe, the baggage handler of the collective unconscious, unlimited ideas will pour through you. And treat the words as if there are ten more better ideas for any one that you throw away. Don't hold on to the one great sentence or paragraph that you think is the best you have ever done. Throw it away and BELIEVE that there is even more that is even better."

Instead, imitate the Greek poet Sappho, the Sufi mystic Rumi, the stunningly prolific Leonardo. Be bold. Expect more. Listen to the cosmos.

2) Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition

This line from a famous Monty Python skit reminds us that we never expect things to go differently yet they often do, and perhaps never more so that when we are creating. This is also known as Murphy's Law.

When you stop expecting perfection and start accepting twists and turns, as well abrupt, sometimes painful halts, you save a tremendous amount of energy -- energy previously spent trying to control the outcome of what you are working on and energy spent demanding life be fair (my daughter's favorite complaint). You also allow yourself to adapt to what is -- a basic principle of evolution and a very powerful place to create from.

Expecting the Spanish Inquisition DOES NOT give you permission to be a negative cynical old poop who walks around muttering, "I told you so." That is living in resentment and that just gets you suffering and stuckness. It simply means when something goes differently, don't waste your time resisting. Instead, learn.

3) Creating is physical

We can change how we create by changing the shape of our body. As renowned yoga teacher Rodney Yee says in his book Poetry of the Body, "I don't understand what is so mysterious about it -- you create different shape with your body and it creates different emotions." I would add, when you create different shapes with your body, you create different ways of being in the world.

My teaching partner Suzanne Falter-Barns is a tall, slender woman who has perfect posture. But most of her life, she slumped. Until she started singing lessons. Her dream (to write and star in an off Broadway one-woman show) brought her to singing lessons and the physical act of creating (singing) brought the change her body needed to pursue her dream.

Ask yourself, "What is the body of creating for me?" Put on some music that makes you feel creative, close the blinds, and experiment with embodying this question. Find the posture, the breathing, the movement of your creativity. Don't think, instead bring your attention into your body and sense, play, make subtle adjustments, be wild, be quiet, notice the body of creating for you.

Another great creativity practice is to find a physical discipline to play with -- aikido, yoga, Tai Chi -- and as you do your yoga or catas, bring your creative blocks, challenges, questions, into the practice. That is how YogaWriting was born -- I noticed the incredible creative energy and insights generated during my yoga practice. So I started bringing my notebook into the yoga studio and asking myself questions about my work. I also noticed that the way I create is the way I do yoga -- surrendering, letting go, and grounding intense energy are issues in both places. So by paying attention to and working with the different poses AND how they relate to my creative process, I began to change the way I create.

I hope your creativity flowers with delight. I'd love to hear how it goes. Mail to: Jennifer@comfortqueen.com

Jennifer Louden is a best-selling author of five books, including her classic, The Woman's Comfort Book, and her newest, Comfort Secrets for Busy Women. She's also a creativity and life coach, creator of the Inner Organizer, and a columnist for Body + Soul Magazine. She leads retreats on self-care and creativity around the country. Hear her live on Martha Stewart Living Radio, Sirius Channel 112 every Sunday at 8 am Pacific, 11 am Eastern.

Visit her world at: http://www.comfortqueen.com and http://www.jenniferlouden.com

Article source: Expert Articles

Most Recent Articles in Creativity category

  • Creativity and Original Thinking: Act Like a Child - By: Lucretia Torva
    When you feel you are not creative, remember what it was like to be a child. Tap into that fresh and creative point of view.
  • What is Creativity? - By: Lucretia Torva
    Creativity is not mysterious. It can be learned and enhanced with some effort.
  • Creativity: The importance of Incubation. - By: Lucretia Torva
    When do your best ideas appear? Is it when you least expect it? There's a reason for great ideas appearing at odd moments and it's just how our minds work.
  • Creativity and Original Thinking: Suggestions from Personal Experience. - By: Lucretia Torva
    A successful visual artist shares tips and tricks to support creative and original thinking. Your great idea may be one simple step away from taking shape.
  • Access to the Creative Flow - By: Patrice Julien
    Imagine what you call reality as being the images of a movie on a screen, the source being a "realistic" scenario inside the projector you are.Without this "SHIFT" we continue to be the slaves of an illusion of "reality" and the victims of our cultural overlays. To illustrate how those overlays shape the energy around us I will take the example of a very deep evidence we all share : the fact that we have to work to get money...
  • Lessons From The Subway - By: John Dir
    In solving problems, I often recall a valuable lesson I learned while traveling the subway in Washington D.C. Some years back, a friend and I attended a large gathering of people from all over the country.
  • Perfect Gift Wrap Ideas - Master the Art of Wrapping Your Gifts Beautifully - By: Michael Douglas
    Haven't there been times when you've received presents that have been wrapped so beautifully that you've let them remain unwrapped simply to admire their beautiful state? Now you too can wrap gifts to perfection and know that people will admire and remember them for a long time to come. Here's how...
  • You Can Fly! - By: Mark Hamer
    Well, it depends on what you mean by ‘fly’ doesn’t it?Let me explain. If you want to fly in business, or in your social or creative life, to fly means to be able to fulfill your potential, to allow your creativity to flower, to exploit your own uniqueness as an individual, to enjoy the freedom of feeling fulfilled and successful.
  • How to Draw Fantasy Creatures - By: Will Kalif
    Drawing fantasy creatures takes some skills that go beyond the normal realm of drawing because you can’t find a subject to pose for you – unless you live in an enchanted forest! So you are faced with not only the task of learning how to draw you are also faced with the challenge of tapping into your imagination and then putting this down on paper. Here are some solid tips that will help you imagine and draw better fantasy creatures.
  • Mindfulness and Painting: Playing Without Expectations - By: Maya Talisman Frost
    Painting is my new passion. Who knew?A few days ago, I was talking to my mother on the phone.