Happy Muesday

Happy Museday 10-27-2015

Are you a fan of Halloween? Do you enjoy the scary parts? There are people who get their kicks from the adrenaline rush of fear.  Not me

I love Halloween but I don’t like being afraid.  I prefer the sugar rush from all the candy, thank you very much.

Being afraid of walking down a dark alley at night is self preservation.  Being afraid of doing something connected to your creativity can feel like that too.

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Here are 3 tips to help you unmask your fears so you can energize your creativity.

1. Break whatever you are afraid of into tiny pieces and just focus on what you can do for a limited amount of time.  If you are afraid of the blank page in a new journal, flip over to the middle or the back and draw a one inch square.  Tell yourself you only have to do something in that square for two minutes. Rinse and repeat.   Focusing allows you to get past the “big picture” fear and make it more manageable.  It also leads us to the next tip.

2. Confidence building is fear-busting.  If you are afraid your skills aren’t good enough, take a class, practice, watch videos on You Tube, read a how-to book.  Skill building is a necessity of any art.  Treating your creativity as a priority strengthens resolve, makes your art more valuable and sends a message to both external and internal critics that you take your art practice seriously.

Our internal critics try to make us believe that we should be born knowing how to do things.  If we are so creative, why don’t we how to mix paint intuitively? 

3. It is important to begin to recognize the spooky lies we have rattling around in the closet of our mind.  Fear is Blockhead’s (the name of my internal critic) weapon of choice to keep us from being who we really are doing what we really love to do. 

When Blockhead says you will be ridiculed if you share your work to a Facebook group, check it out so you know the truth.  Are others routinely ridiculed?  The artist groups I belong to on Facebook are very supportive and encouraging.  If you can’t decide if what Blockhead says is true, ask a trusted friend.  (Hint): If Blockhead is whispering in your ear, he is usually lying.

I hope these tips will help you energize your creativity and overcome your fears.  Save the scary stuff for Halloween.

Cheering You Artfully On,

Diana

Happy MuesDay 10-20-2015

Me: Hello, is this my muse?

Muse: Who is this?  And how did you get this number?

Me: It’s me, Diana, you know, the artist and lazy part-time blogger.

Muse: You’re going to have to be more specific.  There’s a lot of you.  Have you heard of the Internet?

Me: Sure.  How do you think I got your number?  I’m the one from Energize Your Creativity.

Muse: Oh, it’s you.  What do you want?

Me: Some splendid ideas for starters.  I’m a little short in the idea department. 

Muse: What are you working on?

Me: Oh, I’m in between projects right now.  I’m waiting for inspiration to strike.  Isn’t that where you come in?

Muse: OK, invent something that will help me screen my calls.

Me: That’s already been invented.  It’s called, caller ID.

Muse:  Marvelous, where do I get it? 

Me: If I tell you are you going to block me?

Muse: No, it’s against the Muse Code of Ethics.  Now I really must go.  Taylor Swift just blew through another relationship and is about to pick up a pen.

Me: You’re Taylor Swift’s Muse?  I have the same Muse as Taylor Swift?

Muse: You have the same muse as a lot of people.  Muses have an eternal abundance of ideas, inspiration, and creativity to share with a world of people.  I have a very busy schedule. Why give out great ideas to people who don’t do anything with them?  It’s just more rewarding to deliver inspiration up to someone who is part-way there.  If you don’t show up, then why should I?

Me:  I dunno.  I just know you’re hard to get in touch with sometime.

Muse: Wait until I get that caller ID.

Me:  Hey! A dial tone is not inspirational!

Well you heard it here.  You gotta meet you muse part-way, even if it's just a tiny step.  I guess I better start stepping up.

Cheering You Artfully On,

Diana