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12 Hints for Rekindling
Your Creative Spark
by Ken Atchity
(Reprinted from Writer's Digest) |
Sometimes
the struggle to publish can drain even the strongest creative
dynamo. Here's how to recharge your creativity, to keep your career
going... and going... and going...
When you began your struggle to establish a writing career, you
were no doubt highly motivated. The joy of challenge, the lure
of creativity, lured you into your dream.
But now you've struggled for so long that you may not be feeling
that same joy. You may not be feeling it at all. What once seemed
so promising now seems like folly at best, madness at worst.
What's happened? You've allowed the struggle to overpower the
hope and positive energy you began with. You've forgotten that
the creative process follows a natural cycle, from concentration
to abandonment. The cycle begins when motivation leads to work;
which, when not punctuated with appropriate rest periods, leads
naturally to exhaustion; which leads to frustration; then to depression;
then, ideally to reassessment and renewal. If you're pursuing
a "creative" career, the process of keeping yourself motivated,
like the challenge, is endless.
So what do you do when you're not feeling motivated? Try the
following:
Remotivation Rule #1: Keep moving forward despite your moods.
You cannot allow achievement to depend on mood. If you always
must be in a good mood to accomplish your work, then it's probably
time to consult a therapist. You haven't grown up. Grown-ups have
to get the job done no matter what mood they're in. Imagine a
firefighter throwing down the hose because he's no longer in the
mood, or a super Bowl game dependent on a quarterback's moods,
or an Olympic gold medal contender announcing she's not in the
mood to skate in the finals. Edmund Burke said, "Never despair,
but if you do, work on in despair."
If Rule #1 fails because the meeting with your agent went badly,
or because you stared at a blank computer screen for an entire
week, you apply...
Rule #2: When things get tough, take a vacation. But do
so in a carefully limited way. Say, "I need three days off." At
the end of three days, you're likely to feel much better. If not,
try a few more days off: "I need another week away from this project."
Never decide to abandon your project when you're tired. Things
always look worse when you're tired. Remember that you're taking
a vacation only from your work, not from your commitment to the
work.
The moment you're officially on vacation, allow this to percolate
in your mind:
Rule #3: The difficulty you are experiencing is normal --
and necessary. Writing is the highest expression of human
creative potential. So how could it be easy? If it were easy,
everybody would be doing it (instead of just talking about doing
it). Sometimes writers have a hard time with the stress simply
because they haven't realized their stress is necessary. It's
not simply par for the course; it is the course. I once spoke
on a panel with the late Louis L'Amour. he had just published
his 93rd novel, and said to the audience that night, "I feel I'm
finally beginning to master my craft." Afterward, one writer told
me she was quite discouraged by L'Amour's statement. "discouraged?"
I said. "You should be elated! What that tells you is that no
matter how long you live or how many books you write, you'll always
feel challenged by this endlessly challenging craft."
What better way is there to live than with the assurance that
your work will provide you with endless discipline and demands
for excellence? Doesn't it make more sense to congratulate yourself
for having the courage to write than to berate yourself because
you haven't "succeeded"? If you're making progress, you're succeeding.
Now you understand what St. Catherine of Siena meant when she
said, "All the way to heaven is heaven."
Rule #4: Don't doubt yourself. Identify the negative
influences that have caused your resolve to falter. Maybe a well-meaning
relative made a remark about how painful it is to see you wasting
your life pursuing a dream of being a writer. Maybe the doubting
Thomas is your own dark angel -- the little voice inside that
tells you to forget about a writing career.
Either way, it's time to refurbish your self-confidence. You
may have to reevaluate the amount of time you're putting into
your writing, making adjustments that will help you feel more
comfortable about the effort you are putting into your writing
career. You may also have to remind yourself that what other people
say can't affect you unless you allow it to. One way or the other,
it's time to talk to yourself, asking the various parts of your
mind, "What's going on in there?"
Lack of self-confidence is for all of us the greatest enemy.
No matter how successful you become, you'll see -- it never goes
away, but the successful person has managed to move forward despite
his or her lack of self-confidence. Self-confidence increases
when you continue to act (in this case, write) with no regard
for your insecurities.
Rule #5: Face your fear, and make it your ally. According
to popular anthropological accounts of the Malaysian Senoi tribe,
a child dreaming of being chased by a monster would be told that
the monster was, instead, his friend and that he should turn to
face the monster the next time he's chased in his dream. We all
know by heart that crises, when confronted directly, provide opportunity
as well as danger. The first step is to acknowledge and face the
fear, remembering David Viscott's observation (from his book Risking):
"If you have no anxiety, the risk you face is probably not worthy
of you. Only risks you have outgrown don't frighten you."
When a client or student tells me he's filled with anxiety, I
assure him that not only is it a good -- and normal -- sign that
he's afraid, but that he should try to be more afraid. The writing
flourishes when you face your fear, owning it as yours. If you
dare to turn the doorknob behind which the pain lurks, your fear
can become a positive force. The hero's fear becomes a powerful
ally, making his entire being alert and engaged.
Rule #6: Associate with positive people, and stop associating
with negative people. Nothing is more helpful than a positive
support group, and nothing more damaging than constant negative
reinforcement from "friends" and family. Make whatever adjustments
are necessary to reduce or eliminate your contact with the naysayers.
The positive people in your life are the hero's allies who've
encouraged you to pursue your dream no matter what. They are your
true "saints," inspiring you to go on living to the utmost of
your ability. The philosopher-poet Johan Wolfgang von Goethe said,
"If you treat people the way they are, you make them worse. If
you treat them the way they ought to be, you make them capable
of becoming what they ought to be." The positive people are those
who treat you the way you have imagined yourself to be, at your
best. Which leads us to...
Rule#7: Take responsibility. When one of my artist clients
told me, "I never get personally involved in my own affairs,"
I realized how often creative people try to remain detached from
their own commitment -- a defense mechanism with all-too-limited
effectiveness.
I call this "magic thinking": "If I'm real good, work hard, be
patient, the world will honor me eventually, and I've been good,
worked hard, so now I'm waiting for the world to honor me." The
world hardly ever works this way. Most successful people have
struggled long and hard, and endured through multiple failures
before achieving their success.
Rule #8: Take charge of your own thinking. You can control
your own mind better than you may believe right now. Not all the
time, but as you practice, more and more of the time. When you
think, "I am succeeding at being my best self," you are succeeding.
Motivational experts agree that you must see your success, be
able to envision it internally, before you can experience it in
your outer life. It helps to remember that you can't fail at being
you; you're the only one, in fact, who can do that -- which means
that everything you do is important, even being depressed!
Rule #9: Let go of the wrong kind of control. You can
only do what you can do, and then you'll have to let fate take
over. Control what you can do; don't try to control the rest.
Even the most successful people can't control everything -- so
why are you upset about things you can't control? The things you
can control include work you can do in the next hour, or today,
and calls and letters that will help you market your work.
Rule #10: Try to figure out what you really want -- and start
living as though you already have it. Function follows form.
If you commit yourself to the form of your optimal lifestyle,
it will follow in function, but function follows only when your
commitment is truly in place. Important to your remotivation agenda
is reaffirming your commitment to writing. I call this fine-tuning.
Your career will profit from fine-tuning at every stage.
Be careful what you wish for, though, or you're likely to get
it. A screenwriting client called to tell me that she'd gotten
her wish: She'd been hired by the staff of a successful series.
But she'd forgotten to wish for a successful, intelligent series.
now she was paying for her oversight with ten-hour-a-day tedium.
You've gotten past fear and returned to action and concentrated
on the details of your work. Now, it's time to conclude your remotivation
vacation with:
Rule #11: Congratulate yourself and celebrate! "Let's
drink a toast to folly and to dreams," writes Paul-Loup Sulitzer
in his novel The Green King, "because they are the only
reasonable things."
Recognize your courage. After all, you've freely decided to take
this unsafe road; you will never be choked with the tears of regret
shed only by those who lament "the road not taken." the creative
path, as we know by heart, is the difficult path, the path of
anxiety and despair and failure, as well as of challenge and elation
and triumph. You deserve self-respect for the courage of your
commitment (even when it doesn't feel like courage to you at all).
You can't control receiving respect from others; you can control
receiving it from yourself. But if all else fails, there's...
Rule #12: Try just "coasting" for a few days. Focus on
the present rather than on the future. "If worse comes to worse,"
an actress friend told me once, "I'm happy now." It's hard for
creative people, who probably work alone without regular validation
from the world, to keep from living in the future. It's hard not
to do this. But you can give yourself the gift of the present,
when the present is actually satisfactory on most levels required
for life: enough to eat, a place to live, friends and family.
Don't deprive yourself of life's simple pleasures. Meditation
helps. Exercise helps -- especially long walks to new places.
Vacations help. These breaks in routine, by taking you "out of
yourself" temporarily, bring you into contact with the present,
allowing you simply to be here now. Most of the time, when this
happens, you'll be able to regain your perspective.
Ken Atchity's two companies work with writers at every
stage of their development. The Writer's Lifeline (www.thewriterslifeline.com)
helps writers bring their skills and technique to representable
level; and his literary management and motion picture production
company, www.aeionline.com,
represents screenwriters, novelists, and nonfiction writers ready
for representation--and produces their films. His latest film, "Hitting
the Bricks" (directed by Brian T. Jaynes), was based on his
client Noire's forthcoming novel (from Ballantine). Ken can be reached
at kja@aeionline.com.
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