![]() |
I made this during my artist's date yesterday :) |
Sunday, January 29, 2012
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Week 6: Recovering a Sense of Abundance
![]() |
Look after the pennies and the pounds will look after themselves by Mukumbra |
At the end of each week of The Artist's Way, you're asked to do a check-in about how the week went, how you felt about using the tools (morning pages, artist's date), any creative freedom that you noticed or other things helpful to your recovery as an artist. I'm going to start doing a little round-up for myself on here as well.
This week, as you may tell from the title of this post, is themed as "recovering a sense of abundance." In really broad strokes, it means that I'm supposed to be examining my relationship with money. What I think about it, how I feel about it in relation to my art, etc.
I read the chapter this week with a similar feeling to how I read it the first time I did the workbook. That is, "this doesn't apply to me right now."
Last time, as I have mentioned, I started the book as I was starting my final semester of undergrad. I didn't have any sort of job to speak of, and my parents were supporting me.
This time around, I'm in my second year of grad school. My tuition is paid for by the school, I get paid for the classes I teach at school, and my parents are still helping me out.
So, both now and then, I thought that my financial circumstances were out of my control. This week in particular, I noticed myself reading the chapter and thinking that my money problems would be fine if I had the time (like other non-grad-schoolians do) to just go out and get a job. Or two.
And then I realized that this is exactly the sort of thinking that we are meant to examine. I have, unconsciously, placed myself the victim of my circumstances and have allowed that to change the way I perceive money in relation to my creative endeavors.
I have just as much ability to go out and find work as anyone else. My hours are more limited, so my options are more limited, but it is my thinking that is stopping me from going out and trying. (Also, feeling like it's not a great idea, as much as I'd like a little more financial security, because grad school keeps you busy.)
I did, however, start to think that it would be nice for a little extra change to come my way, and - in a nice little bit of synchronicity - a friend of mine had a couple of voice students that she couldn't fit into her schedule, and asked me if I'd like to take them on. Why yes, Universe, I would.
So, once again, thank you Julia Cameron, for making me think about my life. Particularly for making think of the parts of my life that I try not to think about. I'm more and more grasping the fact that my life is what I make of it, and that's an empowering, humbling thing to know.
Friday, January 27, 2012
When do you feel the most creative?
![]() |
Summer Solstice Sunrise in Krakow by Raffee |
I've started to wonder about this since I re-started The Artist's Way. There are times that I expect myself to feel really creative, like when I'm writing my morning pages, but I find that I'm just...not.
I suppose, just because I tell myself "write, right now" doesn't mean that the creativity comes along with it. For some people scheduling time to work on art everyday is helpful, and I've certainly found it to produce results in terms of number of pages written, but it's not always as fun as when I'm feeling inspired or moved or just ready to create some shit.
What I have noticed...is that I feel creative at night. Late at night. This sucks, because that's a time that I like to spend sleeping.
I think I come up with some of my best ideas as I'm falling asleep. Sometimes I actually get up and write them down, but it takes a lot to get me out of a warm bed, so frequently my night insights are left with a "I hope you're still there tomorrow" as I fall asleep.
Feeling creative is different than feeling productive. I feel most productive in the morning. If I can get it together to get out of my oh-so-comfy bed early - I get shit done. But, rarely is it creative shit. It may be mildly creative shit because the things I'm getting done right now are usually homework assignments for grad school, but if I complete something like that in a productive mood, it gets done in a productive (rather than a creative) way.
Starting to hone in on this daily creativity cycle can be helpful. If I can find an ounce of productivity to get me away from the tv or computer late at night, then I can do creative shit when I'm feeling creative. This is also great to know in terms of rehearsals or even auditions - plan them to my advantage. It's like working out to maximize calorie burn. If you work out at a certain time after you've eaten, or at a certain time during the day (depending on which studies you read) you will burn more calories than if you don't. I want to give myself time to be creative when I'm feeling creative.
Also interesting to notice - when I don't feel creative. The morning, wow, the morning. The morning pages are especially difficult when I do not feeling like writing at all! Also, when watching TV. I'm sure this is obvious to some, but I have often tried to write or look over a script or draw while watching TV and it just doesn't work. Watching a movie can be great, but TV...I don't know. Maybe it's the commercials.
Has anyone else noticed this? Do you often feel creative at certain times of the day? Or is it just me?
![]() |
Nocha de luna llena by Luz Adriana Villa A |
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Inspiration: Cross-Create
![]() |
music by craigCloutier |
Normally, my voice teacher has us write out our lyrics on a piece of paper so that we can see the build of the thoughts as the melody changes. For example:
xxxxx
xxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxx
xxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxx
xxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
But with my current song, it looked like
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Boring!
So, he suggested that I make up a story. This is fairly normal, because you want to create circumstances for yourself in a song that are specific and that speak to you and fuel you to perform the song. However, for this particular song he suggested that I think of it like a screenplay. It's basically like making my own music video in my head, but it's not a way that I've worked before so it may turn out to be really helpful.
Decide the specifics of the story, thought by thought, and even imagine what the camera shots look like - when is the camera on you?
when is the camera from your perspective and who are you looking at and why?
when are you singing in voice over and we're seeing a flashback into the time in your life that you're singing about/thinking about?
I think this is not only an awesome idea, but an idea that inspired me - what if I started to apply different mediums to things I'm working on? Like applying screenwriting or film making to singing performance.
My voice teacher told me about an artist friend of his who would put on a symphony and paint what she heard. Sometimes I'll put on music while I'm writing, and damn does it make me feel like everything I'm writing is brilliant!
Cross-Creating is like cross-pollinating. When plants are cross-pollinated, they often end up getting stronger and better able to pollinate (they often have taller stamens, at least according to Wikipedia...).
Maybe if I start cross-creating, my art will get stronger.
Other things to try in the future:
Paint the feeling of a poem
Take pictures of things your character might look at or find interesting - how would they frame it?
Choreograph a dance that embodies the story arc of your character in a play
Sing a monologue - what would it be like if this monologue was the main number of a musical?
Yay making things!
Labels:
acting,
cross-create,
inspiration,
music,
play,
singing,
theatre
Monday, January 23, 2012
10 Lessons the Arts Teach
1. The arts teach children to make good judgments about qualitative relationships.Unlike much of the curriculum in which correct answers and rules prevail, in the arts, it
is judgment rather than rules that prevail.
is judgment rather than rules that prevail.
2. The arts teach children that problems can have more than one solutionand that questions can have more than one answer.
3. The arts celebrate multiple perspectives.One of their large lessons is that there are many ways to see and interpret the world.
4. The arts teach children that in complex forms of problem solving
purposes are seldom fixed, but change with circumstance and opportunity.Learning in the arts requires the ability and a willingness to surrender to the unanticipated possibilities of the work as it unfolds.
purposes are seldom fixed, but change with circumstance and opportunity.Learning in the arts requires the ability and a willingness to surrender to the unanticipated possibilities of the work as it unfolds.
5. The arts make vivid the fact that neither words in their literal form nor numbers exhaust what we can know. The limits of our language do not define the limits of our cognition.
6. The arts teach students that small differences can have large effects.The arts traffic in subtleties.
7. The arts teach students to think through and within a material.All art forms employ some means through which images become real.
8. The arts help children learn to say what cannot be said.When children are invited to disclose what a work of art helps them feel, they must reach into their poetic capacities to find the words that will do the job.
9. The arts enable us to have experience we can have from no other source and through such experience to discover the range and variety of what we are capable of feeling.
10. The arts' position in the school curriculum symbolizes to the young
what adults believe is important.
what adults believe is important.
Support the Arts in our schools!
SOURCE: Eisner, E. (2002). The Arts and the Creation of Mind, In Chapter 4, What the Arts Teach and How It Shows. (pp. 70-92). Yale University Press. Available from NAEA Publications. NAEA grants reprint permission for this excerpt from Ten Lessons with proper acknowledgment of its source and NAEA.
Put It Out There
There's a story that Hitler (yes, I'm writing about Hitler, bear with me) asked his arts advisor about the films made in Germany over the course of a given year. He wanted to know how many had been made. He was told, "About a hundred." He then asked, "Out of those hundred, how many were genius films?" His advisor told him, "Maybe two." Hitler then said, "Well, why don't we just make the genius films?"
The first time I heard this, my response was - why not? We just have to work harder, right? But then I realized that the whole point of the story is that you can't have genius films without the non-genius films to compare them to. You have to make a hundred movies in order to realize that two of them are genius.
Which brings me to the fact that I'm scared.
Yep, ya heard me. Scared. Of writing.
Today is one of those days when it feels like writing and having people read it is one of the scariest things in the world. BUT - I'm doing it anyway. Because I need to get used to just putting shit out there. Because it doesn't matter if it doesn't exist. And not that I'm trying to hit on genius writing with my blog, but it would be nice if there was a teensy bit of value beyond the joy I get from creating it.
Getting used to putting things out there is part of expanding my creativity. My friend Virginia uses this idea as one of her personal process guidelines on her blog, acceptanceprojectnyc.blogspot.com . She calls it "quantity not quality." This is also talked about a lot in the Artist's Way.
Make a deal with your artist/creativity/god that you will take care of the quantity of things being created, as long as he/she/it takes care of the quality.
I like to call it "Putting Shit Out There." Cause even if it's shit, it's got to go in the "created" heap or else what will you be able to compare the gems to?
Part of my "Putting Shit Out There" resolution is this blog. I'm trying to write something everyday. I don't make it everyday, but if that's what keeps me more on track to putting more shit out there, then great.
So, here I am, putting it out there. My musings on the topic of creativity may not be the most creative, but they're mine. I'm planning on putting things that I create on here as well, but...I'm in grad school, and the things I create there are extremely ephemeral. We'll see how that can all translate into one lovely, sloppy, quantity-filled blog on creativity.
![]() |
Action by Jonathan Kos-Read |
The first time I heard this, my response was - why not? We just have to work harder, right? But then I realized that the whole point of the story is that you can't have genius films without the non-genius films to compare them to. You have to make a hundred movies in order to realize that two of them are genius.
Which brings me to the fact that I'm scared.
Yep, ya heard me. Scared. Of writing.
Today is one of those days when it feels like writing and having people read it is one of the scariest things in the world. BUT - I'm doing it anyway. Because I need to get used to just putting shit out there. Because it doesn't matter if it doesn't exist. And not that I'm trying to hit on genius writing with my blog, but it would be nice if there was a teensy bit of value beyond the joy I get from creating it.
Getting used to putting things out there is part of expanding my creativity. My friend Virginia uses this idea as one of her personal process guidelines on her blog, acceptanceprojectnyc.blogspot.com . She calls it "quantity not quality." This is also talked about a lot in the Artist's Way.
Make a deal with your artist/creativity/god that you will take care of the quantity of things being created, as long as he/she/it takes care of the quality.
I like to call it "Putting Shit Out There." Cause even if it's shit, it's got to go in the "created" heap or else what will you be able to compare the gems to?
Part of my "Putting Shit Out There" resolution is this blog. I'm trying to write something everyday. I don't make it everyday, but if that's what keeps me more on track to putting more shit out there, then great.
So, here I am, putting it out there. My musings on the topic of creativity may not be the most creative, but they're mine. I'm planning on putting things that I create on here as well, but...I'm in grad school, and the things I create there are extremely ephemeral. We'll see how that can all translate into one lovely, sloppy, quantity-filled blog on creativity.
Saturday, January 21, 2012
Evil, thy name is Perfectionism
My friend Sonya and I are currently rehearsing a scene from
Chekhov's Three Sisters for school, and at the end of rehearsal yesterday we
were discussing the evils of perfectionism. We were talking about how being
perfect isn't possible and yet we so frequently strive for it in every aspect
of our lives.
We try to be perfect actors. When you are trained in the
American schools, you are taught or somehow misled to believe that the ideal to
be reached is to inhabit your character 100% - to move, breathe, act, talk,
think, feel like your character - to believe that you are your character the
entire time you are playing them. Sonya and I, both being Type A personalities,
have aimed for this in the past when working on characters.
And it drives you crazy.
Why? Because you can never 100% be another person. You would
have to have been born another person, to have lived their life in their time
period and in all their exact circumstances in order to be them completely. But
you will always have been born you. What is an actor to do?!
For a long time, my answer was "do nothing." If
you didn't do any work (or claim that you didn't have time to do the work) then
you can't be blamed for not making it to 100%. I didn't try, so of course I
didn't make it anywhere. I would tell myself that it would be worse if I really
tried, and still didn't make it anywhere.
But trying and failing is how you learn.
So, after getting a kick in the pants by reading David
Mamet's Theatre (more on that another time), I've let go of the guilt by
remembering that 100% is not possible.
Do your work, be prepared, and then get in the room and have
fun with it. Don't let the guilt of not being a perfect actor (or person) keep
you from being an actor at all.
*
My chat with Sonya also reminded me of a conversation I had
with a very good friend when I was first starting to study acting. I think I
was more of a perfectionist then than I am now.
He told me:
1. You're not perfect.
2. You're never going to be perfect.
3. No one thinks you're perfect.
These three things blew my mind and surprise me to this day
because, at the time, I thought the opposite of each was attainable.
"Perfect" is just an idea. An idea that we define
for ourselves, and usually the bar is set beyond what is really achievable. As
we begin to renegotiate our own expectations of ourselves, we can live our
lives in the direction of achievable goals.
Move towards great acting, not perfect acting.
If you want to take it in another direction and out-think
your inner perfectionist:
1. The only thing you can perfect is always being imperfect.
So there, inner perfectionist beast! I'm already imperfect.
Try perfecting that, bitch.
Labels:
acting,
david mamet,
fear,
goals,
guilt,
mamet,
method,
perfectionism,
tea,
theatre
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Do Something You LOVE
![]() |
Be by h.koppdelaney |
Gretchen Rubin over at The Happiness Project wrote a post yesterday about things that you should do daily to be happy & healthy. Her list included things like "wear your seatbelt," and "take prescription medicines properly."
If I had to add one thing to the list, it would be do something you love. Everyday.
It doesn't have to be the same thing everyday, but it should be something. Creativity includes creating your life the way you want to live it. And who doesn't want to spend their days doing something they love?
I'm not only talking about doing something you love for a living. That can be extremely challenging. I'm just talking about having something to look forward to in each day.
If you are in the position to love what you do for your job (or do what you love for your job), remember how lucky you are, and be grateful to anyone that helped you get to that place. If your job is not something that you love, then lift up your day by giving yourself even five minutes to do something just for you:
Take a walk
Have a cup of tea
Read
Put on a nice dress
Call a friend
Crack a joke
(this is obviously my list, and yours may include none of these ridiculous things)
If enjoying your life were as essential as wearing your seatbelt, we'd all be happier, right?
If you could add one thing that you love to your daily routine, what would it be?
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Inspiration: Give Yourself Boundaries
Every Wednesday is going to be Inspiration Day. I'm going to write about things that inspire me to work on new projects, or things that may inspire you.
My boyfriend saw Jack White of the White Stripes on Charlie Rose say he never wanted to expand the band from him and his drummer, Meg, because it challenged him artistically. White said, "I think there's more creativity when there's less opportunity." He said similar things in an interview with Rolling Stone.When my boyfriend told me, all I thought was what a great idea.
Have you ever thought of giving yourself boundaries in order to create something new?
A lot of people are using time as a boundary - 365 days of pictures, a year of doing this or that every day. Theme months, theme weeks. (coincidentally, this picture comes from a 365 pix project - "365 photos taken over the course of forever")
What if you only took pictures of things that were green?
What if you only took pictures from three inches off the ground?
What if you only drew things that made you think of home?
What if you never rehearsed a dance piece in the same room twice?
What if you wrote a short play where each sentence a character spoke had to be one syllable longer than the sentence before?
Some of these could be terribly difficult, but they would force you to do something you've never done before.
Create the box, so that you can think outside of it.
What kind of boxes are you going to create?
My boyfriend saw Jack White of the White Stripes on Charlie Rose say he never wanted to expand the band from him and his drummer, Meg, because it challenged him artistically. White said, "I think there's more creativity when there's less opportunity." He said similar things in an interview with Rolling Stone.When my boyfriend told me, all I thought was what a great idea.
Have you ever thought of giving yourself boundaries in order to create something new?
![]() |
Box girl by sxld |
What if you only took pictures of things that were green?
What if you only took pictures from three inches off the ground?
What if you only drew things that made you think of home?
What if you never rehearsed a dance piece in the same room twice?
What if you wrote a short play where each sentence a character spoke had to be one syllable longer than the sentence before?
Some of these could be terribly difficult, but they would force you to do something you've never done before.
Create the box, so that you can think outside of it.
What kind of boxes are you going to create?
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
A Tale of Synchronicities
![]() |
Alice in Wonderland by Brandon Christopher Warren |
Even though I had my wisdom teeth taken out 8 days before the audition, I got a callback! I was asked to come read for a part at a professional Shakespeare company. At the time, I lived in Berkeley, and the callback was in San Francisco (for those of you unfamiliar, about an hour's drive). BUT, the first day of a class I needed to finish my minor started ONE HOUR after the callback. At UC Berkeley, if you don't show up for the first day of a class, you are automatically dropped, and since it was my last semester I couldn't take it another time. So, with all of these things stacked against me, I decided to go.
"Wait, go?" you say. Yes.
Why? Synchronicity.
The first time I started working through The Artist's Way was a few days after I got my wisdom teeth out, those same four years ago. In it, Julia Cameron talks about synchronicity - when you put a wish, a dream, a hope out into the universe, and something just happens to fall into your lap that fulfills it.
Hadn't I been telling everyone how I wanted to work professionally after college? Hadn't I gone to the general auditions just to meet that end? And yet, there was that part of me that wanted to look this glorious gift horse in the mouth and say "I can't go to this callback because I can't get dropped from my class."
But, something in me started to open up, even with only a few weeks of Artist's Way work under my belt, and I went anyway. (No one's going to die if I don't finish my minor, I finally let myself realize.)
And you know what? It went swimmingly. It was like the part was waiting for me. I had to be able to do Shakespeare, I had to be able to play fast Irish music on an instrument, and I had to be able to sing folk songs. Oh, and dance. Sure, I've only been training my whole life to do exactly all of those things.
So I got the part.
*
![]() |
by 85mm.ch |
I thought of this story recently because it was the biggest example of "yes, this book is helping me change my life" that I could think of as a reason to do start working through it again.
Keep an eye out for when the universe answers the questions you're asking. But you have to ask the questions. Put shit out there. What do you want to accomplish? Just open the door, and watch for when the answers ask to come in. They may not always happen in the ways you thought you wanted, but trust that they will be just what you need.
Monday, January 16, 2012
Waffling? Do Something.
![]() |
untitled by minato - flickr |
You have an afternoon free, so rather than choose to spend an hour of it drawing, or acting, or writing, you start checking your email and suddenly you've spent the entire day doing nothing.
Or, as I recently ran into, you're so worried about what "type" you should be in your headshots that you don't make any choices and come out in a sort of bland wash?
Waffling, putzing, killing time - I find that the easiest way to cut through that mire of bull is to do something. Even if it's only for five minutes. Set a timer or an alarm, and tell yourself that you're going to make the bed. Do your laundry. Choose which shirt to wear for headshots. Go through a monologue - on your feet, not in your head. Stretch. Get out a piece of paper and draw for five minutes. It may not be a masterpiece in that amount of time, but at the end of the day you'll have done something.
(And, if you really want to spice it up, spend those five minutes doing something you've never done before.)
I find that the fear of not choosing the right thing to do can hold me back from doing anything.
![]() |
Lucas Calhoun Photography |
So, in choosing my own headshots, I went with something that is less "I guess that's a nice picture of me." and more "Huh. What's going on there?" It may not represent every version of myself, every aspect of my personality, but it says something.
And - it leaves you with the opportunity to surprise them in the room.
So, go out, do something. Today, I'm going to the gym, I'm rehearsing a scene, and I'm practicing songs. Hopefully I'll be doing more than five minutes of each.
Sunday, January 15, 2012
What's in a Name?
To address the name of the blog -
I wanted to come up with something that included creativity or imagination, as that's the extremely general topic that I'm going to be writing about. My first thought was CreativitINK, but I figured it was taken, and it sound more like someone writing about the types of pens they like to use when they write (an extremely valid topic for posting on this blog, but not what the whole blog's about). I tried a few more things in my head, but nothing jumped out at me.
Then, I hit the interwebs. "Blog Naming" and "How to Start a Blog" were big hits. After a few tries, I ended up on Wordoid.com, which is a name generator which also conveniently tells you if the made-up word it's just created has already been used as a .com or a .net, and how many times it appears in search engines. I popped in "creat" to see what things it would come up with, but after discarding DISCREATY, INCREATED, and SACREAT, among other equally-anti-creativity-sounding words, I went back to playing with words in my head.
Then I thought, CreativiTEA! That's it! I LOVE tea!
Apparently so does everyone else.
Google came back with about 87,000 results for that particular word, reminding me that original ideas are never original, particularly when it comes to homophones.
But then I thought, wait, thanks to grad school, I now know the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), so I changed the spelling to Creativətea. That upside-down e in the middle? It's called a schwa. It's a phonetic symbol that represents the relaxed vowel sound usually used in unstressed syllables of words - believe, photograph, indescribable - as long as you say the words the way you would in regular conversation, assuming that you are not a person that over-articulates every word in every conversation.
So, the name, so far, includes creativity, linguistics, and tea. Great. However, I'm not writing about creativity in general, or how to be creative with tea, or how to be creative about combining linguistics with tea. I'm writing about my personal journey as a creative person.
I found another blog-naming page on GZZT.com (now THAT'S a unique name), which was mostly unhelpful but led me to chronicles. I like it. It reminds me of the Chronicles of Narnia, which I haven't read (surprisingly, to me, because they're definitely in my genre of choice), but makes me think of books. Oh, and this.
So, there you have it. Creativətea Chronicles. The chronicles of one girl, examining creativity, linguistics, tea, you name it.
I wanted to come up with something that included creativity or imagination, as that's the extremely general topic that I'm going to be writing about. My first thought was CreativitINK, but I figured it was taken, and it sound more like someone writing about the types of pens they like to use when they write (an extremely valid topic for posting on this blog, but not what the whole blog's about). I tried a few more things in my head, but nothing jumped out at me.
Then, I hit the interwebs. "Blog Naming" and "How to Start a Blog" were big hits. After a few tries, I ended up on Wordoid.com, which is a name generator which also conveniently tells you if the made-up word it's just created has already been used as a .com or a .net, and how many times it appears in search engines. I popped in "creat" to see what things it would come up with, but after discarding DISCREATY, INCREATED, and SACREAT, among other equally-anti-creativity-sounding words, I went back to playing with words in my head.
Then I thought, CreativiTEA! That's it! I LOVE tea!
Apparently so does everyone else.
Google came back with about 87,000 results for that particular word, reminding me that original ideas are never original, particularly when it comes to homophones.
![]() |
Tea Talk Teacup by Partea at Wrapables.com |
But then I thought, wait, thanks to grad school, I now know the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), so I changed the spelling to Creativətea. That upside-down e in the middle? It's called a schwa. It's a phonetic symbol that represents the relaxed vowel sound usually used in unstressed syllables of words - believe, photograph, indescribable - as long as you say the words the way you would in regular conversation, assuming that you are not a person that over-articulates every word in every conversation.
So, the name, so far, includes creativity, linguistics, and tea. Great. However, I'm not writing about creativity in general, or how to be creative with tea, or how to be creative about combining linguistics with tea. I'm writing about my personal journey as a creative person.
I found another blog-naming page on GZZT.com (now THAT'S a unique name), which was mostly unhelpful but led me to chronicles. I like it. It reminds me of the Chronicles of Narnia, which I haven't read (surprisingly, to me, because they're definitely in my genre of choice), but makes me think of books. Oh, and this.
So, there you have it. Creativətea Chronicles. The chronicles of one girl, examining creativity, linguistics, tea, you name it.
Labels:
blogging,
chronicles,
creativetea,
IPA,
linguistics,
name,
tea
Saturday, January 14, 2012
Beginnings...
A new day, a new blog.
I've never written a blog before. I've toyed with the idea, but I always thought my inclinations for writing were to varied and vague to be distilled into one concise theme. Creativity, however, includes whatever the hell I want it to - so here we are.
I hope to write about things that inspire me, enrage me, spur me to create, to work, to change.
This blog was inspired by my second round of working through Julia Cameron's The Artist's Way. For those of you unfamiliar with the book, it is a sort of 12-step program for your artistic self. I love that it's just structured enough to inspire and not bog you down. I'm currently at the beginning of week 5, and will surely post about how the process is working this time around.
Please peruse, enjoy, create.
I've never written a blog before. I've toyed with the idea, but I always thought my inclinations for writing were to varied and vague to be distilled into one concise theme. Creativity, however, includes whatever the hell I want it to - so here we are.
I hope to write about things that inspire me, enrage me, spur me to create, to work, to change.
This blog was inspired by my second round of working through Julia Cameron's The Artist's Way. For those of you unfamiliar with the book, it is a sort of 12-step program for your artistic self. I love that it's just structured enough to inspire and not bog you down. I'm currently at the beginning of week 5, and will surely post about how the process is working this time around.
Please peruse, enjoy, create.
Labels:
beginning,
blogging,
cameron,
the artist's way,
week 5
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)