Showing posts with label structured creativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label structured creativity. Show all posts

Tend to Your {Creative} Children

Saturday, September 10, 2011


I’m so excited! This weekend I completed my first assignment for Lynne Garner’s class on craft book writing. I’ve walked over that threshold of a new project and feel that I have a firm foundation that will carry me through. Of course, it helps that someone is mentoring my progress.

I’m one of those people who, for better or worse, tends to place everyone else’s needs first. Therefore, if I have any other “work” to do I will put my time into that before I ever spend time on my own projects. The consequences, of course, are that “my” projects are ignored. I hold my creative children hostage against other duties. When all my other work is done I will spend time with them…if there is still time.

Apparently I am not the only writer feeding her children with spare chunks of time. Last Saturday Elizabeth alluded to the same habit of imprisoning her projects in the desk drawer until she had time for them. It is curious…we become writers because we have a creative drive, a story to tell, a soul longing for expression—and then we push all of that aside to attend to what “really” needs to be accomplished.

Knowing that I have this tendency, I recently joined a Friday morning creativity group. Every Friday morning we meet via phone or Internet for a brief chat and then dedicate the next forty minutes to our separate creative endeavors. This “appointment” makes me schedule time for my own pursuits. I’ve found that setting these dates with my creative children enriches my relationship with them and with my soul. The children grow, my soul feels acknowledged, and I have a sense of peace and fulfillment.

If you are like me and have difficulty scheduling time for your own projects try setting regular dates with a friend. You can meet via phone or Internet and agree to spend the next half hour on your separate projects. Knowing that someone else is expecting you to show up might just be the extra nudge you need.

by Robyn Chausse
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The Ironic Balance

Monday, June 09, 2008
By Valerie Fentress

As I sit here trying to pull together the words for my next project and a proposal for an agent, I find myself stumped. There is a part of me that wants to plan everything out. Plan each day, plan each chapter, plan each character hiccup. But all this planning, drive, and goals seem to be holding my creativity back.

I can’t help but laugh at all the "How to write ________" books, and how there is almost a formula and template that must be followed in order to be published. Which completely contradicts the art and creativity of writing.

True this is more a venting of my current frustrations, but it affects all of us from time to time. We listen to Podcasts, blogs, agents, and workshops that tell us color inside the lines, while at the same time the market wants creative explosions that ignore and stretch the lines.

I guess part of me wants to burn my bra and rebel against "The Man", but publishing and writing is just one of those tricky things that takes a combination of structured creativity. The ratio of structure to creativity is supposed to ebb and flow with each project, so don’t be afraid of a bumpy ride. Just because things aren’t coming easy this time around doesn’t mean it’s time to throw in the towel. It’s just another wave to ride out in order to turn that grain of sand of an idea into a pearl.

Good luck to us all :)
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