Helen, receiving your comments is such a gift! I feel like a
kid on Christmas morning when I see them. Your comments are extremely
insightful and helpful. It’s very exciting to see my work through your eyes –
your comments help me see things that I hadn’t noticed. And I love how you’re
able to articulate different things – it helps me to grow my artistic
vocabulary and vision. I’ll be out of town until next Wednesday (driving to
Ithaca NY for my youngest son’s graduation), so it will take me some time to
digest everything and comment back, but I wanted to let you know how much I
appreciate your thoughtful and encouraging comments.
I’m loving this creativity coaching process with you. It’s
extremely useful to have a forum to collect my ideas and get feedback. And
using the blog is great – I’m going to ask my son to help me get the blog
organized so that it’s not just a random bunch of posts.
One of the things I’ve noticed during this process is that
my creative life comes in waves – I have times (like now) where ideas are flowing
in like crazy. It’s very energizing, but can end up making me feel pretty
scattered unless I have a way of recording the ideas and getting feedback on
them. Your feedback is incredibly helpful, and the blog is a great way of
recording the ideas. Eventually, I’ll reach a point where I want to make
progress on some specific idea(s). I’m very organized and logical, so coming up
with an action plan is something I really enjoy. But then comes the sticking
point – there’s usually a part of the action plan that involves getting other
people involved in some way – either as potential partners or clients or
whatever, and then typically I get stuck and can’t get over that hump. Then I
go through a slump, get frustrated and depressed, my energy is at low ebb……and
then, at some point, the process starts over again. I’ve learned that I need to
take advantage of the times when my energy is high to get started on an action
plan. Once I get a set of tasks to work on, I’m disciplined about accomplishing
those tasks, until I reach a critical task that I don’t know how to accomplish
on my own. And that’s part of where I need my “tribe” – I have many great
friends, and many of them are interested enough to listen to my various ideas,
but most of them have a much more conventional mindset that mine, and don’t
really “get” what I’m describing.
I think you are a person who will understand what I’m
talking about, so I’d like to spend some discussing a particular concept during our
next phone call, and developing ideas for how to get that concept from idea to
something more tangible.
The above sounds great Janis. I'll plan on focusing on how to get your concept more tangible in our phone call on Friday. Let me know if 3:30 Friday still works for you.
ReplyDeleteBecause I identify with your process I am a little bit in danger of assuming that everything that works for me will work for you. In reality, I know that is not true, but since we do echo each other quite a bit I'll throw out ideas that I have found useful and trust you to just take what sounds right and discard the rest.
I keep a priority list of things I want to work on. Sometimes its fairly long. Then when I have time I look at it and see which of the priorities I have listed feel like a pleasure to work on that day. I don't go to the most pressing. I go to the one that calls me and I do not beat myself up for avoiding (as long as I meet all due dates). I have found over time that if I try to make myself work on something that I am not in the mood for I will most likely screw it up. But if I allow myself to pick and choose from a list, sometimes choosing the lowest priority makes me feel like a rebel, but I am still getting something on the list done...progress. Does that make sense?
I'm also a big list-maker (I'm a little compulsive here). Lately I've been keeping a combination list/journal where I number the pages and keep a table of contents so I can find what I'm looking for!
ReplyDeleteI like the freedom you give yourself to work on priorities that feel like a pleasure/call to you. I agree that I'm more likely to screw something up (especially if it's something more creative) if I force myself to work on it when I'm not in the mood. But since I'm somewhat compulsive about finishing stuff, sometimes I do something just so I can get it off the list, and at times that means that my timing is off, and the end result suffers.