Friday, April 20, 2012

What Does It Take To Be Creative?


What does it take to be creative?

As I reflect on the past, I realize that as I matured my creative passion grew more intense and purposeful.  I married my first husband when I was in my early twenties and I concentrated my creative juices to make a comfortable and cozy home.  Money was scarce so my friends and I would spend hours going to tag sales, garage sales, and junk sales searching for the perfect whatnot to create the cozy living room or bedroom on pennies.  Through experimentation, I became more aware of how textiles could work together, room arrangements and color combinations could be use to reflect personality and mood, and collectables could add fun and whimsy to a home. When I cooked and baked I tried not just to create yummy dinners and desserts, but also beautiful ones with elegant presentations.

Many years later and, with a new husband, I moved to North Carolina.  My creativity has flourished since our move because in times of quiet,  my brain can rest and process and dream.  My best ideas come to me when I’m relaxed or not preoccupied with producing anything.

Creative people dream new ideas and out of the box concepts and then actually set about to bring them into existence.  Creativity takes time and work and patience to nurture.  It involves learning lots of little skills and then figuring out how to put them together to make something new and special.  Creativity means setting fear aside and putting your heart and soul into a creation (even if it may be criticized and rejected).  Creativity can’t happen without risk.  There are no right or wrong ideas.  I try to trust my intuition.  When I jump off and explore new ideas, the positive energy comes right back to me in ways I had never imagined.

2 comments:

  1. Sounds like you have had really good luck! Lots of people would like to know how to make that happen. Maybe a sense of satisfaction with what you have done makes you retroactively lucky no matter what has happened to you. We see memories of the past through today's imagination and today through eyes conditioned by our pasts. There is much gold for mining back there.

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    1. I agree. The unconscious is timeless and the past remains very alive in the present, for better or worse. Good bye cruel world!! I'm joining the circus!!

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