The
ideal, for any artist, is to stay creatively healthy, happy, and productive.
Begin by recognising that the creative self is something that has specific
needs and requires nurturing and you’ve
made a start. What does the creative
self need? What is the nature of creativity?
If
asked, most people would say that creativity is just making stuff. But no, making
stuff is the end product. Creation itself arises from the very core of
our being, from a deep, deep wellspring within. It is the expression of
something that comes out of the Self but also comes from somewhere beyond
ourselves.
It is
both simple and complicated. Simple because creation is, first and foremost,
play. Not worthy, sensible, serious stuff but simple child- like wonder and playfulness.
Complicated because we grow so far from our simple selves and the world demands
so much that goes against the grain of that simplicity and inner freedom that we
are often in danger of draining the life out of ourselves and our creative
natures.
If you
watch a small child play, they are completely involved, totally present
and alive in the moment, absorbed, endlessly fascinated, always curious, experiencing
the world with all their senses. There is little or no sense of what they can’t
do. Once you've left childhood, play is dismissed as being childish and a waste
of time. But play is not only how children express themselves, it is how they
learn about the world and their place in it. It is how they innovate and find
solutions. It is how their imaginations and their hearts learn to fly. As
Einstein once said “ Imagination is more important than knowledge”.
Your
creative self is just like that small child. Yes, if you are a working
artist/writer/musician there will be hard work and serious stuff but at the
heart of it all you must keep the wonderment, the sense of adventure, the fun,
the lack of strictures and rules and all the other crap that the world says you
need in your life but that will suffocate the life out of that creative happy
child. Do this you and you create a place within your life from which all the
art/words/music/dance comes. This is the anchor, the starting point, the
bedrock of your creative life from which all else proceeds.
This
can be a tricky balance to try and maintain. The world clamours ever louder for
our attention and there a million and one ways to drift away from that bedrock.
Knowing what you need is the vital starting point, from that you can begin to
work out how to keep your creative self sane, happy and nourished.
I will
leave you with a couple of quotations from Joseph Campbell that have been
constant reminders of where my heart has needed to be . .
“I
don’t know whether my conciousness is proper conciousness or not, I don’t know
whether what I know of my being is my proper being or not; but I do know where
my rapture is. So let me hold onto my rapture and that will bring me both my
conciousness and my being.”
“If you
do follow your bliss you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there
all the while waiting for you and the life that you ought to be living is the
one you are living. When you can see that, you begin to meet people who are in
your field of bliss, you are enjoying that refreshment, that life within you
all the time.”
Joseph
Campbell, Mythologist.
Next time . . . . . What Not to Do or How to Keep your Creative Sanity