Designing A Creative Life One Step At A Time | Success Chronicle

Success Chronicle - Success Quotes, Tips and Stories Help to succeed in business and in life!

Success! Who elses wants to discover the real way to success? Are you ready for winning ideas and resources that work for real people like you and me? Hang on to your hats... it's going to be an awesome ride! Welcome to the new and improved Success Chronicle. Share my thoughts on achieving lasting success, abundance and online business growth through the magnetic laws of attraction.

Visit Our Resource Directory

Sep
29
Filed Under (Motivation) by Tray Gamble on 29-09-2007

By Mary McNeil

If you want to live a creatively productive life, the implications can appear to be something of a paradox. That is, if you consider a creatively successful existence to be one that produces large amounts of recognized output during its several decades. To deliver plenty of creative output over the sustained period of a whole lifetime, some particularly robust routines and large helpings of discipline are called for.

This is where the paradox comes in, because the concept of creativity is generally not associated with the rigours of discipline and routine. They would seem to cut across the very nature of inspiration and imagination. Ideas of a creative life tend to be linked, rather, with the spontaneous freedom of a bohemian existence. And yet those who achieve a level of mastery and artistry in their creative field have, almost without exception, done so through many years of sustained and disciplined effort.

So when you begin to think about designing a creative life for yourself, the grand scale of it can be exciting but often rather daunting. Where on earth do you start when you’ve got a whole life to plan and create? Are you up to the challenge of sustained effort and discipline? Will you get blocked?

Julia Cameron writes in The Artist’s Way: “Blocked creatives like to think they are looking at changing their whole life in one fell swoop. This form of grandiosity is often its own undoing… Fantasizing about pursuing our art full-time, we fail to pursue it part-time - or at all.”

Any grand plan, any change of habit always involves taking one step at a time. So while it’s important to know the color and flavor of your very own big picture, it’s actually just the backdrop for the actions you’re going to take today, tomorrow and the day after. Be very careful not to let the sheer scale of your ambitions for the future prevent you from taking the first small steps toward your dreams today.

Taking one step at a time means that you hold the big picture in your imagination as the vision you’re moving towards. It’s important to hold the wider vision so that each step you take on a daily or weekly basis moves you in the right direction. But at the same time you need to be aiming for smaller, short-term, tangible goals consistently.

As time passes and you work your way through a series of shorter-term goals, you’ll be able to look back and see each small achievement as one in a series of stepping stones, leading you with a hop, skip and a jump to your bigger dream goals.

Julia Cameron, again, advises: “Take one small daily action instead of indulging in the big questions. When we allow ourselves to wallow in the big questions, we fail to find the small answers.”

Article Source: http://articlesltd.com

If you’re brimming with creative ideas but struggling to develop them into tangible output, the practical support of a coach can make all the difference. Mary McNeil of Create a Space is an experienced, ICF-certified life coach, natural born planner and declutterer extraordinaire! She works with artists, writers and musicians, encouraging and supporting them as they make creative output a practical reality.

        Read More   

    Post a Comment
    Name:
    Email:
    Website:
    Comments:

    This is a captcha-picture. It is used to prevent mass-access by robots. (see: www.captcha.net)

    You must read and type the 5 chars within 0..9 and A..F, and submit the form.

      

    Oh no, I cannot read this. Please, generate a