From Kevin Kelly at The Technium.
- You have 5 minutes to act on a new idea before it disappears from your mind. [This is often true for me. A half hour goes by and I find I'm scrating my head trying to remember what that wonderful idea I had was.]
- When you are stuck or overwhelmed, focus on the smallest possible thing that moves your project forward.
- When you find yourself procrastinating, don’t resist. Instead lean into it. Procrastinate 100%. Try to do absolutely nothing for 5 minutes. Make it your job. You’ll fail. After 5 minutes, you’ll be ready and eager to work.
From Miss Mustard Seed, who shared these thoughts after a relaxing, creative retreat with a like-minded artist. Of the experience she wrote,
. . . it was a time spent mulling over little things in my business, simmering on new ideas and thoughts, and, probably most importantly, it gave me time to plug in to a lot of creative encouragement from authors, podcasters, and [her friend] Shaunna. People spoke into things like time management, the energy required for good creative work, cultivating a flow of ideas, ways to prevent or deal with burn-out, some of the pitfalls of social media, failure, and more.
It was all a good reminder that rest is a crucial part of work and input is every bit as important as output.”
I love this gentle reminder that creativity needs time, encouragement, energy.
--Nancy.
Oh yes--lovely quotes--we all so need "fallow" time to regenerate...and rest the brain...
ReplyDeleteI think that is why I like "repetitive" stitching--the rhythm lets my mind wander down many pathways and often ideas come to me...
I think I miss my knitting most of all--my first craft and my all time favorite...So portable and then, once a pattern is established, just mindless moving through the motions...kind of like my piano practicing--which I loved doing..
thanks so much for such a thoughtful post...
hugs, Julierose
Thanks for the visit and comment, Julierose. I often think winter is the fallow time but so many of us are unhappy with the cold, the snow, the grey skies, etc. We stew instead of resting our brains. (Some of us, at least.)
DeleteI'm so sorry you had to give up knitting and playing the piano. It's so hard when our bodies won't do what they used to. We just miss some things.
A creative retreat would be delightful. I think that's what blogging does for me. I sit down for lunch and turn on my computer and retreat into what others are doing. Thanks for sharing the quotes. This is a quote I found recently and I just love it. "He said his talent wasn't talent but rather diligence born of enjoyment" Brinkley
ReplyDeleteI hadn't thought about reading blogs that way before, Robin, but I think I agree. It is a sort of creative retreat. (And being the introvert that I am, I wouldn't be comfortable if six or eight of us met in person but am happy to converse through comments and email.)
DeleteI love that quote by Brinkley. Do we sometimes confuse the results of practice with talent? A person practices the piano for 6 hours a day, 6 days a week, for months and years, then performs for the public. We say, What talent! Maybe not talent at all. Thanks so much for sharing the quote.
I've creatively procrastinated enough. Now I have a project with a deadline that I must tackle. But first, the daily round of blog posts.....
ReplyDeleteHahaha. I'm a great procrastinator but it's impossible for me to sit and do nothing. I can always find something else to do.
DeleteBest wishes for a speedy finish of your project with a deadline, Nann.