Never doubt what those younger than you can teach you.
Somewhere in adulthood, we lose the sense of pride in our work. At least in my life, I've learned to be ashamed of the things I love, the things I do. I have always downplayed my passions for so long, but I continue to be reminded that you cannot change the world if you never speak your dreams out loud. How can you bring a smile to someone's face if you're embarrassed by your creations?
Here's a lesson I've learned: you're not breathing for you. Someone else needs you today, and if you're ashamed of who you are, that's selfish. Stories are meant to be read, painting are meant to be seen, and melodies are meant to be heard. Give your breath away.
No longer will your dreams come out only at night while, when the light is on, you've learned to become a mute. Dream big and speak even bigger.
I'm not ashamed. Are you?
Of course, it's much easier to write something than it is to say it out loud. So write it big.
But speak it even bigger.
Sunday, October 9, 2016
Friday, June 10, 2016
When You're Starving
We've all been there. The computer hibernates, the piano keys get dusty, the pen's ink hardens--you just can't think of anything to do. Your creative tap has run dry, and the ideas are no longer flowing. Everything you try turns to ash, and you just can't think of anything good enough to get you going again, whether it's with a story, a song, or a painting. You're in a creative purgatory.
So take a walk. Actually get out of your room and go outside. And whatever you do, don't take your phone; that's the opposite of the goal, because the goal is to do away with all distractions so that you can get distracted. Let me explain.
The artist's job is to reflect and affect life around us. In order to do that, one must first reflect. But how can an artist reflect on something if he hasn't studied it? Creating a work of art is like taking a test while the entire time you're reflecting on what you've studied, which should be everything around you. The good news is that with this kind of test, you can take studying breaks.
So reflecting means going on experiences, observing others, and taking time to think. A visit to the zoo can give you an idea for a story and help you with research at the same time; sitting on a park bench and watching people walk, interact, and play with dogs may give you inspiration for a painting; a nice spot overlooking the sunset behind the city may drop a melody in your mind or a lyric in your lap.
As an artist you are never off duty. Ours is a full-time job. And when you've picked up the never-ending habit of reflecting, you will create something that will affect culture. And suddenly, you're not starving anymore. The creative tap is pouring faster than you can fill up your pitchers. You have countless ideas, and a limited amount of time to do them in. But as Michelangelo said, "I hope that I may always desire more than I can accomplish." What a blessing to desire more than you can actually achieve.
And all because you took a walk.
So take a walk. Actually get out of your room and go outside. And whatever you do, don't take your phone; that's the opposite of the goal, because the goal is to do away with all distractions so that you can get distracted. Let me explain.
The artist's job is to reflect and affect life around us. In order to do that, one must first reflect. But how can an artist reflect on something if he hasn't studied it? Creating a work of art is like taking a test while the entire time you're reflecting on what you've studied, which should be everything around you. The good news is that with this kind of test, you can take studying breaks.
So reflecting means going on experiences, observing others, and taking time to think. A visit to the zoo can give you an idea for a story and help you with research at the same time; sitting on a park bench and watching people walk, interact, and play with dogs may give you inspiration for a painting; a nice spot overlooking the sunset behind the city may drop a melody in your mind or a lyric in your lap.
As an artist you are never off duty. Ours is a full-time job. And when you've picked up the never-ending habit of reflecting, you will create something that will affect culture. And suddenly, you're not starving anymore. The creative tap is pouring faster than you can fill up your pitchers. You have countless ideas, and a limited amount of time to do them in. But as Michelangelo said, "I hope that I may always desire more than I can accomplish." What a blessing to desire more than you can actually achieve.
And all because you took a walk.
Friday, March 25, 2016
Good
What makes something good?
I don't mean a good meal that "hits the spot" but a piece of art that is really, undeniably, and inherently good? There's been some speculation recently on the nature of What's Your Story, so I would like to use this post to clear up what I (as one person) define as good art.
For me, I divide good into three factors. You may not agree and you may see other factors, but these are the most prominent for me. When I admire any form of art, it is because the art is unique, beautiful, and excellent.
Let's start there, at unique, or another word for creativity. For a piece of art to be unique, I believe it begins at the person on the other side. Every person is unique, and so whatever they make will be a special, new creation. If your hands are unique, logically wouldn't anything to which you put your hands be unique as well? True, there is nothing new under the sun, but there are countless expressions of the stories already told. That's why in writing classes, a student will learn about archetypes, and then read of the stories that came before him, realizing that the same structures are used but a different product is produced with every person. That's unique at work. If you sit both Ernest Hemingway and J.K. Rowling in front of a desk to write the story of the Scarlet Letter, wouldn't you think that those two versions of a simple story would be so vastly different from each other's and Nathaniel Hawthorne's version?
It's just like a dancer compiling ordinary turns and leaps into a choreographed piece. Separate, none of these moves are new, but together in the brain (your brain), it's novel and special. And if they dare to go further, it's unique. Because they did something no one else has or could have done. You can improve unique more and more as long as you don't limit your imagination.
Your story is unique to you. No one else can tell it. So whatever you create will be special. Just look at this blog. All of these words have been used a million times over but never in this exact arrangement. That's all because of me. Only I could tell this story. That's unique.
What about beautiful? I am a firm believer in the old saying, "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder," but I am also a believer of universal beauty (a contradiction in the highest degree. Unique, huh?) For the defense of the former, beauty is relative, because people see beauty through different lenses, based on their unique personalities and worldviews (see how everything adds together?). Have you ever gone to an art gallery with a friend? Watch which paintings they hover over and at which you linger. Beauty is never the same. And that's the beauty of beauty.
However, there is a universally accepted tradition of beauty; if I didn't say that, I would be lying. Just look at famous models, the Mona Lisa, or Aurora Borealis. So how do I reconcile this contradiction? Well, I realize that, according to art at least, this standard most people call beauty is actually known as excellence. If a host of people can agree that a statue is beautiful, they usually are referring to it being well-done. Beyond that, the beauty of the sculpture is seen in different perspectives; they may all see it beautiful, but some more than the others. So, this standard is not a problem at all for beauty anymore. If excellence is universal, that makes beautiful relative.
So beautiful is opinionated. And if all three aspects are extremely strong, nearly every person in the world will say, "That is beautiful." Picasso is a famously controversial topic because his work is regarded as beautiful, even though everything within the frame appeals to ugliness. His most famous works are the opposite of beauty, and yet they are loved. If it's true that they are beautiful, then the beauty came from his own heart. And where does creativity come from? You. (Refer back to the paragraph on unique if you must.)
Beautiful is when your entire heart is bared on a canvas or a stage or in a song. It's that moment when someone reads a poem they wrote that emanates from their very soul, and the only reaction in the room is "That was beautiful." Your heart can touch other hearts. And every heart is unique, so all hearts will be touched by beautiful in infinitely different ways. That's why we need so many artists. There's always someone out there who gets us.
So what about excellence, that universal poster child for good? That's the hardest aspect of making something good, in my opinion. A lot of creations will lack this, and that's okay. As I said earlier, there is a universal standard for what is excellent. However, even this can be challenged. If art has a standard of excellence, then where does that standard come from? Popular opinion? Maybe. It's a lot easier to tell when something's bad than when it's good. To me, excellence, as you'll see, is just the bare bones of the technique. So maybe that's all that the standard is. Pretty shaky, huh? That's why I favor the approach to relativity in art. And yet, somehow, we can all agree when something looks right.
Excellence is a process that you should strive for every day. If you wake up thinking you've already achieved excellence, you've actually only failed, because excellence means constantly bettering yourself. It's never finished. It's impossible to arrive at perfection, but excellence is pretty darn close. Excellence isn't just a better synonym for good; it means to be superior in an area. So how do people become superior in an area?
Simply learning and practicing. You do know Da Vinci had to learn how to paint once right? It's easy to forget that. After learning how to go about doing the art form, you must practice it. Concert pianists practice every day, touring ballerinas stretch every day, and Broadway performers sing every day. If they don't, they're fools. To me, excellence is when someone has first put in the necessary work to learn the art form, is then diligent in creating the said art form time and time again (practice doesn't make perfect, but it can make excellence), and finally, is ruthless in pushing themselves to go even further than they thought they could go. I know what my bar of excellence is, and I sure know when I don't hit it. Do you?
So to be excellent, you have to learn the craft. You can't go onstage for the first time and deliver a Shakespeare soliloquy, bringing the audience to tears (unless you have amazing talent, which I'll get to in a second). You have to learn it and hone it through practice. And even then, talent comes into play (told you). Talent is a vague word for what can be called your inherent abilities. Your talent is what you have been created to do. Talent helps you reach excellence, because it helps makes you, for lack of a better explanation, good at something. In what would take people years to perfect, you might have done in a month. Talent alone doesn't define anything however; it just helps. But even without talent, a bad writer can become a good writer, a good writer a great writer, and a great writer an excellent one, all through learning the craft (no one wants to see a misspelled title (unless it's deliberate. Which would be unique)), practicing the craft, and pushing yourself to be the best you can be in the craft. If you're not trying to be the best you can be at what you do, then why are you doing that thing? It had better not be for the applause. The applause always dies down. Your hard work doesn't. And by the way, fighting for excellence? It shows. People can see it.
So after working towards a standard of excellence, which certainly shows, your art is considered beautiful by those whose hearts are touched by yours. All because your heart is unique.
And not everyone will see it as beautiful, by the way. When you fight for something, more often than not, you encounter resistance. You will be attacked, You will be made fun of.
Do you know how many times I've been made fun of for What's Your Story? Don't let that stop you from something beautiful. Even if only one person finds it beautiful, that's pretty worth it.
Don't we all need a little beauty in an otherwise ugly life?
Now, some final thoughts. It's very possible to love an art form but be no good at it. I say with my whole heart to still go for that art form and create it. I can't paint, but that doesn't stop me. I know no one is going to buy my paintings, but sometimes, since beauty is in the eye of the beholder, someone will find something I did good. Because they see that I pushed myself with practice and told my own story.
Told you. It shows.
Another thought (or warning, if you will): it is also possible to create art without one of the attributes.
Without unique? You might know it by the familiar term of imitation. Don't copy someone else. Trust your own genius and create your own story. Someone else's just won't do for what you need to tell your own story.
Without excellence? That's called laziness, and it's the bane of an artist's existence. Don't you dare use your talent or the fact that you are unique to opt out of excellence. That is the coward's way out. Anyone can do that. What will you do?
Without beautiful? That's called trash. Usually if something lacks beauty, it's because it's something so opposite of beauty that it's utterly grotesque to you and your story. Instead of revealing their heart, the artist is attacking yours. We have all encountered artists like this. They're loud, they're angry, and they're full of hate. Don't be the excellent trash. Throwing out beautiful doesn't make you more unique.
So, after a long explanation, I call "art" an expression of creativity. Your creativity. But I also call good art an expression of creativity that is simultaneously excellent, beautiful, and unique.
But What's Your Story isn't about pushing you to excellence or finding masterpieces, and it's certainly not about encouraging mediocrity or inflating self. As supporter Cody Hill said, "It's about doing something creative, whether it meets a standard of excellence or not." It's about encouraging people that it's okay to fail, and that even if it's not excellent, the chances are that someone will find it beautiful.
One time, my friend pulled out an old painting that had been in the closet for years because they thought it was bad, and my other friend couldn't believe why it had been placed in a closet in the first place. The painting was then given as a gift, and it's still hanging on that second friend's wall to this day. You have to believe that someone will love what you create that much because hearts love hearts. But only if you find it good first.
And why shouldn't you? It's unique to you, isn't you? Because you're unique. And that's something to celebrate.
It's certainly a good starting point.
I don't mean a good meal that "hits the spot" but a piece of art that is really, undeniably, and inherently good? There's been some speculation recently on the nature of What's Your Story, so I would like to use this post to clear up what I (as one person) define as good art.
For me, I divide good into three factors. You may not agree and you may see other factors, but these are the most prominent for me. When I admire any form of art, it is because the art is unique, beautiful, and excellent.
Let's start there, at unique, or another word for creativity. For a piece of art to be unique, I believe it begins at the person on the other side. Every person is unique, and so whatever they make will be a special, new creation. If your hands are unique, logically wouldn't anything to which you put your hands be unique as well? True, there is nothing new under the sun, but there are countless expressions of the stories already told. That's why in writing classes, a student will learn about archetypes, and then read of the stories that came before him, realizing that the same structures are used but a different product is produced with every person. That's unique at work. If you sit both Ernest Hemingway and J.K. Rowling in front of a desk to write the story of the Scarlet Letter, wouldn't you think that those two versions of a simple story would be so vastly different from each other's and Nathaniel Hawthorne's version?
It's just like a dancer compiling ordinary turns and leaps into a choreographed piece. Separate, none of these moves are new, but together in the brain (your brain), it's novel and special. And if they dare to go further, it's unique. Because they did something no one else has or could have done. You can improve unique more and more as long as you don't limit your imagination.
Your story is unique to you. No one else can tell it. So whatever you create will be special. Just look at this blog. All of these words have been used a million times over but never in this exact arrangement. That's all because of me. Only I could tell this story. That's unique.
What about beautiful? I am a firm believer in the old saying, "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder," but I am also a believer of universal beauty (a contradiction in the highest degree. Unique, huh?) For the defense of the former, beauty is relative, because people see beauty through different lenses, based on their unique personalities and worldviews (see how everything adds together?). Have you ever gone to an art gallery with a friend? Watch which paintings they hover over and at which you linger. Beauty is never the same. And that's the beauty of beauty.
However, there is a universally accepted tradition of beauty; if I didn't say that, I would be lying. Just look at famous models, the Mona Lisa, or Aurora Borealis. So how do I reconcile this contradiction? Well, I realize that, according to art at least, this standard most people call beauty is actually known as excellence. If a host of people can agree that a statue is beautiful, they usually are referring to it being well-done. Beyond that, the beauty of the sculpture is seen in different perspectives; they may all see it beautiful, but some more than the others. So, this standard is not a problem at all for beauty anymore. If excellence is universal, that makes beautiful relative.
So beautiful is opinionated. And if all three aspects are extremely strong, nearly every person in the world will say, "That is beautiful." Picasso is a famously controversial topic because his work is regarded as beautiful, even though everything within the frame appeals to ugliness. His most famous works are the opposite of beauty, and yet they are loved. If it's true that they are beautiful, then the beauty came from his own heart. And where does creativity come from? You. (Refer back to the paragraph on unique if you must.)
Beautiful is when your entire heart is bared on a canvas or a stage or in a song. It's that moment when someone reads a poem they wrote that emanates from their very soul, and the only reaction in the room is "That was beautiful." Your heart can touch other hearts. And every heart is unique, so all hearts will be touched by beautiful in infinitely different ways. That's why we need so many artists. There's always someone out there who gets us.
So what about excellence, that universal poster child for good? That's the hardest aspect of making something good, in my opinion. A lot of creations will lack this, and that's okay. As I said earlier, there is a universal standard for what is excellent. However, even this can be challenged. If art has a standard of excellence, then where does that standard come from? Popular opinion? Maybe. It's a lot easier to tell when something's bad than when it's good. To me, excellence, as you'll see, is just the bare bones of the technique. So maybe that's all that the standard is. Pretty shaky, huh? That's why I favor the approach to relativity in art. And yet, somehow, we can all agree when something looks right.
Excellence is a process that you should strive for every day. If you wake up thinking you've already achieved excellence, you've actually only failed, because excellence means constantly bettering yourself. It's never finished. It's impossible to arrive at perfection, but excellence is pretty darn close. Excellence isn't just a better synonym for good; it means to be superior in an area. So how do people become superior in an area?
Simply learning and practicing. You do know Da Vinci had to learn how to paint once right? It's easy to forget that. After learning how to go about doing the art form, you must practice it. Concert pianists practice every day, touring ballerinas stretch every day, and Broadway performers sing every day. If they don't, they're fools. To me, excellence is when someone has first put in the necessary work to learn the art form, is then diligent in creating the said art form time and time again (practice doesn't make perfect, but it can make excellence), and finally, is ruthless in pushing themselves to go even further than they thought they could go. I know what my bar of excellence is, and I sure know when I don't hit it. Do you?
So to be excellent, you have to learn the craft. You can't go onstage for the first time and deliver a Shakespeare soliloquy, bringing the audience to tears (unless you have amazing talent, which I'll get to in a second). You have to learn it and hone it through practice. And even then, talent comes into play (told you). Talent is a vague word for what can be called your inherent abilities. Your talent is what you have been created to do. Talent helps you reach excellence, because it helps makes you, for lack of a better explanation, good at something. In what would take people years to perfect, you might have done in a month. Talent alone doesn't define anything however; it just helps. But even without talent, a bad writer can become a good writer, a good writer a great writer, and a great writer an excellent one, all through learning the craft (no one wants to see a misspelled title (unless it's deliberate. Which would be unique)), practicing the craft, and pushing yourself to be the best you can be in the craft. If you're not trying to be the best you can be at what you do, then why are you doing that thing? It had better not be for the applause. The applause always dies down. Your hard work doesn't. And by the way, fighting for excellence? It shows. People can see it.
So after working towards a standard of excellence, which certainly shows, your art is considered beautiful by those whose hearts are touched by yours. All because your heart is unique.
And not everyone will see it as beautiful, by the way. When you fight for something, more often than not, you encounter resistance. You will be attacked, You will be made fun of.
Do you know how many times I've been made fun of for What's Your Story? Don't let that stop you from something beautiful. Even if only one person finds it beautiful, that's pretty worth it.
Don't we all need a little beauty in an otherwise ugly life?
Now, some final thoughts. It's very possible to love an art form but be no good at it. I say with my whole heart to still go for that art form and create it. I can't paint, but that doesn't stop me. I know no one is going to buy my paintings, but sometimes, since beauty is in the eye of the beholder, someone will find something I did good. Because they see that I pushed myself with practice and told my own story.
Told you. It shows.
Another thought (or warning, if you will): it is also possible to create art without one of the attributes.
Without unique? You might know it by the familiar term of imitation. Don't copy someone else. Trust your own genius and create your own story. Someone else's just won't do for what you need to tell your own story.
Without excellence? That's called laziness, and it's the bane of an artist's existence. Don't you dare use your talent or the fact that you are unique to opt out of excellence. That is the coward's way out. Anyone can do that. What will you do?
Without beautiful? That's called trash. Usually if something lacks beauty, it's because it's something so opposite of beauty that it's utterly grotesque to you and your story. Instead of revealing their heart, the artist is attacking yours. We have all encountered artists like this. They're loud, they're angry, and they're full of hate. Don't be the excellent trash. Throwing out beautiful doesn't make you more unique.
So, after a long explanation, I call "art" an expression of creativity. Your creativity. But I also call good art an expression of creativity that is simultaneously excellent, beautiful, and unique.
But What's Your Story isn't about pushing you to excellence or finding masterpieces, and it's certainly not about encouraging mediocrity or inflating self. As supporter Cody Hill said, "It's about doing something creative, whether it meets a standard of excellence or not." It's about encouraging people that it's okay to fail, and that even if it's not excellent, the chances are that someone will find it beautiful.
One time, my friend pulled out an old painting that had been in the closet for years because they thought it was bad, and my other friend couldn't believe why it had been placed in a closet in the first place. The painting was then given as a gift, and it's still hanging on that second friend's wall to this day. You have to believe that someone will love what you create that much because hearts love hearts. But only if you find it good first.
And why shouldn't you? It's unique to you, isn't you? Because you're unique. And that's something to celebrate.
It's certainly a good starting point.
Saturday, March 5, 2016
Reignite
Extroverts, Introverts, Ambiverts, whoever you are, you all experience the very familiar feeling of exhaustion. Not just physical exhaustion but entire emotional, mental, and physical exhaustion. It's that moment when you can't get out of bed because your body is so tired, you can't cry because your emotions are deadened, and you can't think because your brain has shut down. If you are an introvert and you feel low, you lock yourself up in your room and read a book. If you're an extrovert and you feel low, you find some friends and make a memory. Both simple and effective solutions. But, for me, at this stage of complete and utter exhaustion, creating is the thing that energizes.
If you feel numb, then turn back to a hobby or occupation that always makes you feel something. Return to what you love, because it loves you too. What you love isn't only there for the good times. That wouldn't quite be love, would it? Art is there when you're alone and don't know what else to do. It takes a lot of willpower to get out of that bed and go outside, but it only takes a little bit of willpower to grab a notebook and pen and write a poem in your bed. It's a little bit of sacrifice for a lot of results.
It can jumpstart your emotions when they feel dried up, because pursuing your passion will always reignite your passion. It can exercise your brain both in times when you hit a creative wall and don't know what else to do with your story, your sketch, or your dance and also when your thoughts are moving faster than the speed of the pen. It can even help your physical exhaustion, which is usually a side-effect of emotional or mental exhaustion. And all of this comes with the simple drive of returning to what you love.
What ignited your desire for a particular art form in the first place? Because every time you return to it, your passion will be reignited, even stronger than before. You are a flame, constantly in motion, ever changing, and every time you neglect the things you love, the embers die down. The moment you feel exhausted is the moment the flame has grown so small that you can see it no longer, and all that is left is to feel meaningless.
Have you felt this moment before? I have. It's not an evil moment, however. Because without the fading of the flame, the glorious reigniting of the passion wouldn't be as captivating or beautiful.
I think the best part is stepping back and taking in what you've created, allowing the melody to resonate or the paint to dry. You should be proud. Even in a time of complete apathy, you created something beautiful. That's something to be proud of and take joy in. It's a lot easier to sleep at night knowing that you did something good that day, that you created something worthwhile. Especially if it's something that might inspire someone else. That's worthwhile. Don't let that feeling fade.
But even if you do...you'll get the joy of reigniting it all over again.
Sunday, January 10, 2016
Freedom to Fail
Cheers to all the perfectionists.
If you don't know what that means, you aren't one. A perfectionist is someone who demands perfection in themselves and especially in their work. At the worst case scenario, a perfectionist can also demand perfection in their surroundings, environment, and friends, and it can become crippling. At the best, a perfectionist can nearly drop a project entirely when they make a mistake.
If you know you're a perfectionist, it's probably because you've heard people say "just let it go" and "why is this bugging you?" or even "it's not that big of a deal" all your life. Why? Because at the core of perfectionism, your standard for excellence is higher than your peers, and they just don't understand that. Before I go on with the dangers of perfectionism, I want you to hear me: don't you ever lower your standard for excellence. It's high for a reason. Because you are the only one that can reach that height. It's not an unattainable goal, and it certainly won't be perfect, but it's excellence. Be proud of that.
Now, perfectionism can also be paralyzing. Either an idea never moves from your mind because you are too afraid to put mistake-caked hands to a perfect image in your mind, or the idea moves to creation, and there has already been a mistake. The former is a paralyzing fear of failure, and the second is a devastating reality of failure. I don't know from where the idea of perfection came in our society, but there is a simple cure. In fact, the cure is the ailment: mistakes.
You don't have to be perfect.
If you want to make art perfect, then you are in the wrong field. Art is a firsthand representation of humanity, and humanity, you guessed it, is flawed. Therefore, art will have mistakes. Do you think Da Vinci didn't make a mistake when he painted the Mona Lisa, that his hand didn't shake at least once? The reason the Mona Lisa exists is because Da Vinci allowed the possibility of mistakes and created something beautiful, a famous masterpiece. He also had years of experience which is a fancy way of saying, he made some mistakes. By that point, he knew how to deal with the mistakes or how to not make them. Being a master at something doesn't mean you never make mistakes, it only means you know what to do when you encounter them.
Perfectionism is a gift and a curse. You will fight for all you can to reach that standard of excellence, but you have to be okay with not being perfect. In other words, make a mistake. I guarantee you, if you make a mistake, it will either end up being the most significant piece of your masterpiece that you wouldn't change for the world or you will simply learn from it and move on. You don't have to make mistakes, but you are allowed to.
So pick up that novel you've been working on, that painting you've been thinking about, or that tune you've been humming. Then go to your safe place, close the door, and create. In that room, there is no judgement. You can make whatever mistake you want, and it's not any less art than when you began. It's amazing what you'll find you can do behind closed doors. You discover the freedom to fail. And something beautiful emerges--it always does.
And then, when you've mastered the freedom to fail, open the door, let the world in...
And fail some more.
If you don't know what that means, you aren't one. A perfectionist is someone who demands perfection in themselves and especially in their work. At the worst case scenario, a perfectionist can also demand perfection in their surroundings, environment, and friends, and it can become crippling. At the best, a perfectionist can nearly drop a project entirely when they make a mistake.
If you know you're a perfectionist, it's probably because you've heard people say "just let it go" and "why is this bugging you?" or even "it's not that big of a deal" all your life. Why? Because at the core of perfectionism, your standard for excellence is higher than your peers, and they just don't understand that. Before I go on with the dangers of perfectionism, I want you to hear me: don't you ever lower your standard for excellence. It's high for a reason. Because you are the only one that can reach that height. It's not an unattainable goal, and it certainly won't be perfect, but it's excellence. Be proud of that.
Now, perfectionism can also be paralyzing. Either an idea never moves from your mind because you are too afraid to put mistake-caked hands to a perfect image in your mind, or the idea moves to creation, and there has already been a mistake. The former is a paralyzing fear of failure, and the second is a devastating reality of failure. I don't know from where the idea of perfection came in our society, but there is a simple cure. In fact, the cure is the ailment: mistakes.
You don't have to be perfect.
If you want to make art perfect, then you are in the wrong field. Art is a firsthand representation of humanity, and humanity, you guessed it, is flawed. Therefore, art will have mistakes. Do you think Da Vinci didn't make a mistake when he painted the Mona Lisa, that his hand didn't shake at least once? The reason the Mona Lisa exists is because Da Vinci allowed the possibility of mistakes and created something beautiful, a famous masterpiece. He also had years of experience which is a fancy way of saying, he made some mistakes. By that point, he knew how to deal with the mistakes or how to not make them. Being a master at something doesn't mean you never make mistakes, it only means you know what to do when you encounter them.
Perfectionism is a gift and a curse. You will fight for all you can to reach that standard of excellence, but you have to be okay with not being perfect. In other words, make a mistake. I guarantee you, if you make a mistake, it will either end up being the most significant piece of your masterpiece that you wouldn't change for the world or you will simply learn from it and move on. You don't have to make mistakes, but you are allowed to.
So pick up that novel you've been working on, that painting you've been thinking about, or that tune you've been humming. Then go to your safe place, close the door, and create. In that room, there is no judgement. You can make whatever mistake you want, and it's not any less art than when you began. It's amazing what you'll find you can do behind closed doors. You discover the freedom to fail. And something beautiful emerges--it always does.
And then, when you've mastered the freedom to fail, open the door, let the world in...
And fail some more.
Sunday, January 3, 2016
Soliloquy for Curiosity
Curiosity’s Soliloquy
By Kim Camacho
"I remember her like a sunset.
Vibrant in color and mysterious in
form.
Here, for a painted moment.
A mere brushstroke of enthrallment.
And then as quick as she lit up, so
natural and bright,
she fell into the horizon of red,
blue and starry dreams.
And with the strength of an eagle,
flew far, far away into the golden hue of opportunity.
I watched as humble sight-seeing
became violent vision matches.
As the universe became a racetrack of
panthers with asses for heads.
How the wisest and boldest of men
became the prey of the money-bagging hyenas; watching, waiting for contraptions
of genius to spur out of the flower pot heads, only then to be plucked out from
the stem to the roots; Leaving barely any soil left for planting new seeds of
thought.
I saw the sculptured ideas of artists
become the constructed advertisements for illusionists.
I watched a beautiful idea become
transformed by the possibility addict and his companion, the boldness junkie.
Adventure became manipulating women
who allowed for no wrong turns.
Conversation has become an electric
fruit that Eve and Adam couldn’t even resist.
And the world has learned to be
content with the plastic, medicated joy and drunken success they think they
have achieved. But worst of all, I have become a distant memory.
My love doesn’t even think about me any more.
She is too consumed in facts and
logic and information that she has forgotten the source of those elements.
She has forgotten that all those are
paths not destinations. And they lead to an idea not an item.
My love tells answers rather than
seeks truth.
And truth is the only way to make a
thought an idea.
Truth makes books into stories.
Paintings into feelings.
Technology into advancements.
Truth is also the only way to discern
between a fact and a lie.
Truth is a beautiful enlightenment,
and my love is lacking this beacon of life.
I can see it in her plastered face
and famined form.
In her hopeless eyes and deafened
ears.
I see how you hurt my love, and oh
how I wish I could go back to that shore where you first appeared on the
horizon.
Full of vibrance and innocent rays of
warmth.
So much hope in your pure face.
You may not know, but it was at this
moment that I came to be.
I am yours. You brought out the best
in every part of me.
And killed everything I was.
But I still love you.
And you can bring it back, my twisted
moon dance.
My peculiar masterpiece.
My intriguing perception.
You can bring my glory back if you
wish.
Only if you wish.
But ah, my darling, I cannot make
you.
It is your decision and yours alone.
You have allowed me to fade in the
darkness as the poison of contorted notions has overtaken your light.
I cannot make you shine, I cannot
give you joy, I cannot exist in a state of “okay.”
I can only live if there is a longing
and something to long for.
And when there’s nothing to long for, nothing to
discover, no truth to be learned…
Then I, your precious and ever
waiting, curiosity, must remain in the shadows. Until I once again shine
brighter than the darkness."
Sunday, December 27, 2015
New Year's Every Day
"May every sunrise hold more promise and may every sunset hold more peace."
Now is the allotted time every American understands; Christmas is past, and New Years Day is around the corner. Do you have any resolutions?
Or maybe the question is, what type of New Year's celebrator are you? You might be one of those people who lives for resolutions (whether you finish them or not is an entirely different matter), or you might not care for them at all. Whichever you are, it is not about the resolutions. At the core of New Year's, the concept is simply that the year is about to be over, and you have a blank canvas in front of you. You can paint whatever you want. New Year's is just an idea that...
Change is possible. If you don't like something about yourself, change it. But rather than making a resolution to stop doing something, make a resolution to start doing something that counteracts what you don't like about yourself. Instead of stopping wasting your time with one activity, make a resolution to every time you want to do that thing, you read a book instead or go on a walk.
But it's not that easy, is it? As human beings, the one thing you can count on is the devoted promise that we make mistakes. So I am here to propose the idea that maybe New Year's isn't just on one day, that you don't get just one chance to be who you want to be, but a hundred, a thousand, a million. Every day is a new day, a smaller blank canvas waiting for you to create who you are. You have a countless amount of new chances and opportunities in front of you, so that you can keep making mistakes until you get it right. And you will, especially with help.
So this next year, New Year comes every day.
Don't give up. Make those resolutions or not but always remember that each day is a new chance with new opportunities and new choices to make. You alone decide who you want to be. Take it one step at a time, one day at a time; don't tackle the entire empty mural of a year but take the days one canvas at a time until the mural is complete. It will be hard but do not give up. If no one else tells you in this death-filled world, I am proud of you. You can do anything, because at the start of a new day, there is the promise that anything is possible, and at the end of that new day, there is the peace that you did your absolute best. At the start of a new day, you can be whoever you want to be. So why wait until one midnight?
New Year's starts today.
Now is the allotted time every American understands; Christmas is past, and New Years Day is around the corner. Do you have any resolutions?
Or maybe the question is, what type of New Year's celebrator are you? You might be one of those people who lives for resolutions (whether you finish them or not is an entirely different matter), or you might not care for them at all. Whichever you are, it is not about the resolutions. At the core of New Year's, the concept is simply that the year is about to be over, and you have a blank canvas in front of you. You can paint whatever you want. New Year's is just an idea that...
Change is possible. If you don't like something about yourself, change it. But rather than making a resolution to stop doing something, make a resolution to start doing something that counteracts what you don't like about yourself. Instead of stopping wasting your time with one activity, make a resolution to every time you want to do that thing, you read a book instead or go on a walk.
But it's not that easy, is it? As human beings, the one thing you can count on is the devoted promise that we make mistakes. So I am here to propose the idea that maybe New Year's isn't just on one day, that you don't get just one chance to be who you want to be, but a hundred, a thousand, a million. Every day is a new day, a smaller blank canvas waiting for you to create who you are. You have a countless amount of new chances and opportunities in front of you, so that you can keep making mistakes until you get it right. And you will, especially with help.
So this next year, New Year comes every day.
Don't give up. Make those resolutions or not but always remember that each day is a new chance with new opportunities and new choices to make. You alone decide who you want to be. Take it one step at a time, one day at a time; don't tackle the entire empty mural of a year but take the days one canvas at a time until the mural is complete. It will be hard but do not give up. If no one else tells you in this death-filled world, I am proud of you. You can do anything, because at the start of a new day, there is the promise that anything is possible, and at the end of that new day, there is the peace that you did your absolute best. At the start of a new day, you can be whoever you want to be. So why wait until one midnight?
New Year's starts today.
Sunday, December 20, 2015
Imagination Is
"Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world." - Albert Einstein
Too much pressure is put upon those from the ages of elementary school through college to be "smart." You cannot argue that some of the only things gained from school are fleeting, random pieces of knowledge. In school, you memorize formulas or learn how to write, but you never learn why the formula is there or what to write. Knowledge only goes so far, and most of the criteria learned in school is simply that: knowledge.
However, while knowledge is taught, imagination is not. It is instinctive; you just do it. It is a gift every person bears, but it is never honed, sharpened. On the contrary, imagination withers when essays have to be structured exactly like this, the formula cannot be any other way, etc. There is no room for creativity anymore. Instead of praising a creative effort, a student who decides to be different from the rest is failed.
But was it not imagination that gave us the very practical things enjoyed today like electricity or computers? Imagination is not a passive idea but the very blood of innovation. It is active, and the more you strengthen that muscle of your brain, the more your imagination will grow beyond even your wildest imagination.
This is not a call to arms against school but rather a plea to bring the curriculum of imagination into schools. Teach students how to better express their emotions onto the page, guide them through the practical discernment of when best to utilize imagination in everyday life, and allow them the opportunity to realize that the left brain and the right brain were meant to go hand in hand. Imagination and Knowledge are not enemies but brothers. Without knowledge, imagination is nonsense; without imagination, knowledge is crippled.
Even Einstein, a world famous scientist understood how important imagination is. Yes, knowledge is good, but knowledge is limited. Knowledge is the facts. Knowledge is the what. Imagination is the how, the why. Imagination is every dream. Imagination is every possibility. Imagination is absolutely endless. Imagination encircles the world.
If a person empowers his imagination, there is no stopping them. When we were kids, we believed we could fly. We believed we could do anything. We can return to that once again.
Dream impossible dreams. Reach for impossible heights. It's time to start believing again.
Do you believe you can do anything?
I believe I can, but maybe that's just my imagination.
Too much pressure is put upon those from the ages of elementary school through college to be "smart." You cannot argue that some of the only things gained from school are fleeting, random pieces of knowledge. In school, you memorize formulas or learn how to write, but you never learn why the formula is there or what to write. Knowledge only goes so far, and most of the criteria learned in school is simply that: knowledge.
However, while knowledge is taught, imagination is not. It is instinctive; you just do it. It is a gift every person bears, but it is never honed, sharpened. On the contrary, imagination withers when essays have to be structured exactly like this, the formula cannot be any other way, etc. There is no room for creativity anymore. Instead of praising a creative effort, a student who decides to be different from the rest is failed.
But was it not imagination that gave us the very practical things enjoyed today like electricity or computers? Imagination is not a passive idea but the very blood of innovation. It is active, and the more you strengthen that muscle of your brain, the more your imagination will grow beyond even your wildest imagination.
This is not a call to arms against school but rather a plea to bring the curriculum of imagination into schools. Teach students how to better express their emotions onto the page, guide them through the practical discernment of when best to utilize imagination in everyday life, and allow them the opportunity to realize that the left brain and the right brain were meant to go hand in hand. Imagination and Knowledge are not enemies but brothers. Without knowledge, imagination is nonsense; without imagination, knowledge is crippled.
Even Einstein, a world famous scientist understood how important imagination is. Yes, knowledge is good, but knowledge is limited. Knowledge is the facts. Knowledge is the what. Imagination is the how, the why. Imagination is every dream. Imagination is every possibility. Imagination is absolutely endless. Imagination encircles the world.
If a person empowers his imagination, there is no stopping them. When we were kids, we believed we could fly. We believed we could do anything. We can return to that once again.
Dream impossible dreams. Reach for impossible heights. It's time to start believing again.
Do you believe you can do anything?
I believe I can, but maybe that's just my imagination.
Sunday, December 13, 2015
Infinitely Minute
"Painting is an infinitely minute part of my personality." - Salvador Dali
It's important to find who you are and what makes you happy; however, the worst thing you can do is limit yourself. Too many people make the thing they love their entire life, and when that very things fails them, they look around at their life and find a broken trail of missed opportunities.
As adults, we ask kids what they want to be, instantly confining their entire future to a box. Essentially, we ask them who they want to be when, instead, who they are is a collection of a thousand desires.
What you do is not who you are.
It is only a part of you, a smaller part of you than you realize. Dali himself, a renowned surrealist painter, realized that painting was not his identity. He knew that the very thing he loved and the thing for which he was famous was only a speck on the spectrum of who he was.
So why do we limit ourselves? You don't have to just do one thing; you can do everything. Why not? What are you waiting for? You are an endless collection of hopes and fears, dreams and nightmares. You have a lot more in you than you realize. Stop making a section of your personality your entire being. You don't have to give up a hobby for your dream. You don't have to cut out sections of your life to make room for another, drastically inflated section.
Be a writer who ventures on nature walks to feed the birds. Be a dancer who visits art galleries regularly. Be a photographer who reads plays. My favorite parts of myself are not the things I do for a living but the things I do in silence. There is so much more to me than anyone will realize; you have the same potential in you as well.
Maybe if you take the time to discover the entire spectrum of your personality, you'll find something new about yourself.
And then you can keep on creating, fulfilling each infinitely minute part of you one day at a time.
It's important to find who you are and what makes you happy; however, the worst thing you can do is limit yourself. Too many people make the thing they love their entire life, and when that very things fails them, they look around at their life and find a broken trail of missed opportunities.
As adults, we ask kids what they want to be, instantly confining their entire future to a box. Essentially, we ask them who they want to be when, instead, who they are is a collection of a thousand desires.
What you do is not who you are.
It is only a part of you, a smaller part of you than you realize. Dali himself, a renowned surrealist painter, realized that painting was not his identity. He knew that the very thing he loved and the thing for which he was famous was only a speck on the spectrum of who he was.
So why do we limit ourselves? You don't have to just do one thing; you can do everything. Why not? What are you waiting for? You are an endless collection of hopes and fears, dreams and nightmares. You have a lot more in you than you realize. Stop making a section of your personality your entire being. You don't have to give up a hobby for your dream. You don't have to cut out sections of your life to make room for another, drastically inflated section.
Be a writer who ventures on nature walks to feed the birds. Be a dancer who visits art galleries regularly. Be a photographer who reads plays. My favorite parts of myself are not the things I do for a living but the things I do in silence. There is so much more to me than anyone will realize; you have the same potential in you as well.
Maybe if you take the time to discover the entire spectrum of your personality, you'll find something new about yourself.
And then you can keep on creating, fulfilling each infinitely minute part of you one day at a time.
Sunday, December 6, 2015
Every Artist His Muse
"Every King needs his Queen; every Artist his Muse."
For some reason the assumption of artists is that they are separate from society and must work alone. This could not be further from the truth. Yes, sometimes separation is necessary, but it is this very "society" that inspires artists to create. Even Henry David Thoreau escaped the social world only to write about it in his book Walden. Whether someone is constantly trying to be with people or avoid people, they are inspired by those very people. At the heart, artists create a form of life, and in that endeavor, one must understand life.
There are "solo artists," but are they really "solo"? They have people who help record their songs, play with them, and sell their work. They need a partnership.
Whether or not you realize it, you need people. Even if you do not believe anything that was said above, there is still one other relationship that sparks creativity. The unseen spectator known as the audience. Their part is not a passive one; it is active. They bring "the work in contact with the external world by deciphering and interpreting its inner qualifications and thus add their contribution to the creative act," as Marcel Duchamp says. As an artist, you raise questions, and questions are meant to be answered. That is the audience's job. They are your collaborators, and you need them as much as they need you. It is a beautiful partnership. Human beings are relationship-driven, so why can't art be?
You weren't meant to be alone.
Cole Porter had Linda Lee Thomas. Picasso had Adriana. Robert Frost had Elinor Frost.
Find someone who understands your blend of tortured joy in creating art and do not ever let them go.
They are your muse.
Sunday, November 29, 2015
When the Pupils Dilate
"You are one decision away from a totally different life."
Life is so short. There are so very few things that can make us happy, and yet we instead constantly pursue the things that squelch this very joy. We choose the things that force us to dread waking up every morning, that dull the enjoyment of eating meals, and even that make the sun seem to shine less brightly. Why?
Because we were told to.
"Art is a hobby."
"You need a stable job."
"You're being selfish."
"You can't support a family like that."
"This is just a phase."
Listen closely as I speak for the thousands of unspoken voices battling depression, anxiety, and fear because they are not allowed to choose to do what they love each and every day:
This is not a phase.
This is who we are. Why is it selfish to be happy? Every person should be doing what they love whether it be engineering or dancing. If you daydream about another profession, another idea, or another life, then that is what you love. You were born to live that life, not this life you were forced to fit into. So many people go to work but only wish they could get back home to their hobby, because that is what they truly love. You do not have to live like that. When did hobbies become the secrets of who you really are? The question is simple...
What makes you smile? What makes your face light up? What makes your pupils dilate? Love is a chemical response in the brain, and when that feeling appears, the pupils dilate. A very simple bodily function to a unforgettable and magnificent feeling. Does it happen when you talk about your favorite book? A movie concept? This song that makes you want to dance? The colors you want to use for your next painting? A single lyric in your favorite poem? Watch for the pupils and when they dilate. You will know who a person really is by what they love.
Find that thing that makes you happy and do not let it go. It is part of who you are. It is part of your story. If you do not know what makes you happy then think about this:
Have you ever woken up so overwhelmingly ecstatic about something?
Then remember that. Hold on to that. Because if you chase that very thing, the odds are that you will wake up with that feeling again, as you were meant to. No longer do you have to be unhappy just to please someone else, to conform to society or peer pressure, or to do what you thought you were supposed to love. You are free to wake up in the morning with a smile once more.
You were born to be happy so do not let anyone else tell you otherwise.
When do your pupils dilate?
Life is so short. There are so very few things that can make us happy, and yet we instead constantly pursue the things that squelch this very joy. We choose the things that force us to dread waking up every morning, that dull the enjoyment of eating meals, and even that make the sun seem to shine less brightly. Why?
Because we were told to.
"Art is a hobby."
"You need a stable job."
"You're being selfish."
"You can't support a family like that."
"This is just a phase."
Listen closely as I speak for the thousands of unspoken voices battling depression, anxiety, and fear because they are not allowed to choose to do what they love each and every day:
This is not a phase.
This is who we are. Why is it selfish to be happy? Every person should be doing what they love whether it be engineering or dancing. If you daydream about another profession, another idea, or another life, then that is what you love. You were born to live that life, not this life you were forced to fit into. So many people go to work but only wish they could get back home to their hobby, because that is what they truly love. You do not have to live like that. When did hobbies become the secrets of who you really are? The question is simple...
What makes you smile? What makes your face light up? What makes your pupils dilate? Love is a chemical response in the brain, and when that feeling appears, the pupils dilate. A very simple bodily function to a unforgettable and magnificent feeling. Does it happen when you talk about your favorite book? A movie concept? This song that makes you want to dance? The colors you want to use for your next painting? A single lyric in your favorite poem? Watch for the pupils and when they dilate. You will know who a person really is by what they love.
Find that thing that makes you happy and do not let it go. It is part of who you are. It is part of your story. If you do not know what makes you happy then think about this:
Have you ever woken up so overwhelmingly ecstatic about something?
Then remember that. Hold on to that. Because if you chase that very thing, the odds are that you will wake up with that feeling again, as you were meant to. No longer do you have to be unhappy just to please someone else, to conform to society or peer pressure, or to do what you thought you were supposed to love. You are free to wake up in the morning with a smile once more.
You were born to be happy so do not let anyone else tell you otherwise.
When do your pupils dilate?
Sunday, November 22, 2015
What Are You Fighting For?
"When Winston Churchill was asked to cut arts funding in favor of the war effort, he simply replied, 'Then what are we fighting for?'"
Turn on the news. It's hard to not find tragedy. People are hurting, looking for peace--looking for any sort of joy.
They need to be inspired now more than ever. They need something that makes them smile.
Why can't you provide that something?
This is a world where one event shakes the entire earth and brings us all together, not as nations but as brothers and sisters of humanity. When the world is shaking, something sturdy is needed. In the wake of tragedy, people need to hope. Why can't you be the one to inspire someone with hope?
In these times, it is easy to lose the focus on what is really important and what really brings people together. Winston Churchill understood that better than most.
So why are the arts so important in times like these? Not only do they provide a much needed escape, a paradisaical respite from war, but they combat war. Art provides hope, joy, and love, everything that war is not.
Why?
We're human, and art is a part of us. It's who we are. We are either Creators or Decimators. We bring art, or we bring war. The choice is ever present, and the struggle is ever constant.
What are you fighting for?
Turn on the news. It's hard to not find tragedy. People are hurting, looking for peace--looking for any sort of joy.
They need to be inspired now more than ever. They need something that makes them smile.
Why can't you provide that something?
This is a world where one event shakes the entire earth and brings us all together, not as nations but as brothers and sisters of humanity. When the world is shaking, something sturdy is needed. In the wake of tragedy, people need to hope. Why can't you be the one to inspire someone with hope?
In these times, it is easy to lose the focus on what is really important and what really brings people together. Winston Churchill understood that better than most.
So why are the arts so important in times like these? Not only do they provide a much needed escape, a paradisaical respite from war, but they combat war. Art provides hope, joy, and love, everything that war is not.
Why?
We're human, and art is a part of us. It's who we are. We are either Creators or Decimators. We bring art, or we bring war. The choice is ever present, and the struggle is ever constant.
What are you fighting for?
Monday, November 16, 2015
Down the Rabbit Hole
"We're all a little mad here..."
Art has a funny way of appearing in the most unexpected circumstances.
I know from experience that one wrong note plucked on a guitar can lead to a whole new song. One out of place line can lead to a entirely different poem. These are not mistakes. They are living, breathing forms of your story, and they are leading you to something beautiful.
Follow them.
Do I sound crazy? Maybe it's because I dared to open those parts of myself and followed those emotions and thoughts down the rabbit hole. There, I discovered a feeling I could never quite express in words. Not only that, but I also felt joy in creating something that was entirely my own. I went down the rabbit hole and followed that wrong note until I discovered a hidden part of my own story.
What would have happened if I had fixed the mistake?
Play a chord until the lyrics come out of your mouth. Put a song on repeat until the music affects your body. Hold a brush until a drop of paints falls onto the canvas.
And follow it down the rabbit hole.
Art has a funny way of appearing in the most unexpected circumstances.
I know from experience that one wrong note plucked on a guitar can lead to a whole new song. One out of place line can lead to a entirely different poem. These are not mistakes. They are living, breathing forms of your story, and they are leading you to something beautiful.
Follow them.
Do I sound crazy? Maybe it's because I dared to open those parts of myself and followed those emotions and thoughts down the rabbit hole. There, I discovered a feeling I could never quite express in words. Not only that, but I also felt joy in creating something that was entirely my own. I went down the rabbit hole and followed that wrong note until I discovered a hidden part of my own story.
What would have happened if I had fixed the mistake?
Play a chord until the lyrics come out of your mouth. Put a song on repeat until the music affects your body. Hold a brush until a drop of paints falls onto the canvas.
And follow it down the rabbit hole.
Sunday, November 8, 2015
Daring to be Impulsive
When we were young children, we cried when we were sad, we laughed when we were happy, and we screamed when we were angry. We voiced our emotions whenever we felt like it. We followed our impulses, because at the time, that was all we knew. We were spontaneous. At the time, it was okay.
But then we grew up. And suddenly, feeling something was wrong. Very early on, we were taught to hide what we felt. We were taught to silence our desire to follow impulses. We still felt them, but we could not follow them. We could not longer cry, no longer scream--we did not stop feeling, no. But we were not supposed to reveal what we felt. So what happened to those feelings, those instincts?
They were bottled up. Every impulse to feel something was muffled, because we had to "act normal." Without realizing it, we were taught that being an adult meant that you cannot be spontaneous.
If this is true, then I do not want to be an adult.
But what if there was an escape from the pressures of growing old? What if there was a way to cry, laugh, and scream without judgment? All you need is a place to direct those impulses.
You see, art is not always premeditated. A feeling is felt, and then that feeling is followed. What follows next is a masterpiece. Every great songwriter, painter, or writer created something beautiful, because they first felt something. If you do not allow yourself to feel certain things, then how can you express them? And if you do not express them, then how can you reach someone who is experiencing the very same thing?
Following impulses is simpler than you think. The next time you have a reasonable idea, act on it. That very impulse you might have silenced could be the greatest adventure of your life.
Therefore, I will continue to follow my own impulses and choose to find spontaneity in every day. Art is outside the box; why can't you be too?
So I will choose to randomly sit out here under the stars, past midnight, playing on my guitar, because that is what makes me happy.
And who knows...that one impulse that led me to this spot might be the reason that this song I'm now writing touches someone's life or makes them laugh.
All because I felt something, and I followed that feeling.
Do you dare?
But then we grew up. And suddenly, feeling something was wrong. Very early on, we were taught to hide what we felt. We were taught to silence our desire to follow impulses. We still felt them, but we could not follow them. We could not longer cry, no longer scream--we did not stop feeling, no. But we were not supposed to reveal what we felt. So what happened to those feelings, those instincts?
They were bottled up. Every impulse to feel something was muffled, because we had to "act normal." Without realizing it, we were taught that being an adult meant that you cannot be spontaneous.
If this is true, then I do not want to be an adult.
But what if there was an escape from the pressures of growing old? What if there was a way to cry, laugh, and scream without judgment? All you need is a place to direct those impulses.
You see, art is not always premeditated. A feeling is felt, and then that feeling is followed. What follows next is a masterpiece. Every great songwriter, painter, or writer created something beautiful, because they first felt something. If you do not allow yourself to feel certain things, then how can you express them? And if you do not express them, then how can you reach someone who is experiencing the very same thing?
Following impulses is simpler than you think. The next time you have a reasonable idea, act on it. That very impulse you might have silenced could be the greatest adventure of your life.
Therefore, I will continue to follow my own impulses and choose to find spontaneity in every day. Art is outside the box; why can't you be too?
So I will choose to randomly sit out here under the stars, past midnight, playing on my guitar, because that is what makes me happy.
And who knows...that one impulse that led me to this spot might be the reason that this song I'm now writing touches someone's life or makes them laugh.
All because I felt something, and I followed that feeling.
Do you dare?
Sunday, November 1, 2015
Who's the Star?
"I once took this English class in college, and we had
been going over a brief, very literature and "English" way of seeing
a worldview of love. One thing that really stuck out to me was one of my
professors points and more importantly a video and quote he used to illustrate
his point. My professors third point in his lecture was the 'requisite of love
- the royal law of love'. He went on from there to explain that to love someone
one you must be able to recognize our sameness, and to have a loving appreciation
of uniqueness (how vastly different we all are). He then clicked his laptop and this quote
appeared on the projector in front of me and what I read hit me right in the
very center of my heart:
"Love is the
difficult realization that something other than oneself is real." Iris
Murdoch
Oh, ouch! It hit me after I read it a second time how very
guilty I am of committing this crime too. What Murdoch, in this simple one
sentence, conveys is that until you take the spotlight off of yourself and
realize you are not the star of the universe; until you do this you will not be
able to love. And yes Iris Murdoch is right, how 'difficult of a realization'
this is. I think to some degree we all see ourselves as the stars in our own
movies. And that the rest of the people in our life play principle characters
and may very well win Oscars in this life for best supporting actress or best
supporting actor. However, we are the star! Yet it did ever occur to you that
the person you passed in the hallway at work or school, just once (you'll never
see them again) thinks the same very thing about themselves? To each other
we're simply extras in each others movie...yet we're starring in our own movie.
I'd never realized how, without even trying, self centered I was. How could I
be so caught up in whats happening around me that I didn't stop to notice the
'extras' in 'my movie'?! Everyone has a story, and their story affects how they
act day to day, and that story deserves to be heard. I think that's what true
love is, or maybe this chips away at what true love is. It's kinda like that
line from Les Miserables,
"To love another person is to see the face of God"
Because of this
simple general education class I now have a brand new perspective on people
that I pass in the hallway's, the person I sit next to at a stoplight. What's
their story? What have they been through? And if given the chance would I love
them enough to listen to their story? I think that's what true love is, or
definitely a big part, not focusing on yourself and your life but seeing the
'extras' in your life and making them 'the stars' of the show."
--Maggie Quick, Guest
Contributor
Sunday, October 25, 2015
Regifting a Smile
"I hope the people who wrote those songs are happy. I hope they feel its enough. I really do because they've made me happy. And I'm only one person." - Charlie from The Perks of Being a Wallflower
How many times has something changed your day? How many times has it changed your life? Maybe you know this feeling all too well, or maybe you can't even imagine what it might feel like. I've had those moments where I wished I could just thank the writer, the author, the creator for touching my life, but there was no way of reaching them. Maybe you can't thank them. But what you can do is inspire someone else. You can extend how they made you feel to another. You can make someone happy.
Why? Because someone made you happy. Give that same gift to someone else. And even if you are not happy, art has a funny way of putting a smile on your face regardless of whether you are giving or receiving it. If you don't agree, prove me wrong.
Because even if you create something to show me that it didn't make you happy, I'll be smiling. I'll be overjoyed to look at your art, and I'll be inspired to keep creating myself. Just think of what you'll feel when you see you put smiles on the faces of dozens, hundreds, thousands.
You should be happy--you should be proud. Because you've made me happy.
And I'm only one person.
Sunday, October 18, 2015
This is Our Story
What’s Your Story?
Everybody’s
got one…how will you tell yours?
Art is everywhere—especially in you. A simple melody, a three-word phrase, a wordless
stroke of a paintbrush are all flashes of art in our world. They make up
everything around us, though crafted only by those few famous creators of our
time. Every song, every poem, every painting is left to the professionals. But
now, it is your time.
You,
the everyman. Art is everywhere—especially in you.
I
am not a man of legend. My brain is not a brilliant palace of creativity, but I
do have a story. I will tell my
story. I could tell it through dance. I could tell it through song. I could
tell it through novels, paintings, poems, sketches, photography, graphic
design, music of any instrument, lyrics, scripts, film, calligraphy, acting,
hair design, makeup design, cooking, sculpting, sewing, knitting, short stories—the
list goes on and on, because the list
only stops when you decide you cannot create any more. But you can make art. After all, art is everywhere—especially
in you.
But
what exactly is “art?”
Art,
nowadays is an off-putting term. We only go to see art at a gallery, and when
we have had our fill, we leave the art behind until we think of it again, only
as an activity, possibly years later. Most of the population frowns on art as
though it should only be a pastime. I intend to change that mindset. Art is not
meant to be solely housed inside a stationary prison but endlessly spread
across the world for everyone to see. Those paintings, structures, and
sculptures seen at museums and exhibits are only fractions of what art could
be. When did sonnets, plays, music, and dance all stop becoming “art?” In the
modern definition of the word, art is “the quality, production, expression, or
realm, according to aesthetic principles, of what is beautiful.”
If
that is the definition of art, then that inspires the question…what is beautiful?
You.
You
are beautiful because you were created by the
Beautiful. There is nothing that separates you from the professionals of this
age, other than your ingrained presupposition that you simply cannot create. You are a unique and
interwoven tapestry of emotions, thoughts, and ideas. Why not express them?
This mess of sunshine and darkness, hopes and fears, memories and imaginations
fused at your very core is what I call your story. Your story is your being. It is who you were, who you are, and who
you will become simultaneously coexisting in the same plane: you. There is no
one way to express your story, for each story is pricelessly unique and
deserves to be told a thousand different times in a thousand different ways.
So
if your story is you—and you are beautiful—and art is anything that is
beautiful, then your story is art.
Anything you create can be a masterpiece, not based on grade, skill level, fear
of failure to reach perfection, desire to impress others, or traditional lenses
of the word beauty but based solely on your heart—your story.
What
if my story impacts a million people? Or even more…what if my story impacts just one? How can I not share my story and
touch that one life, inspiring it with the everyday beauty in life? Not only will
sharing your story impact your own life, but it will impact others. It will inspire both yourself, those around
you, and those you have yet to meet. Your story will be seen, heard, and felt.
But
how can you do that? It’s simple. Start by creating something once a week
through any one of the innumerable art forms and post it on any social media
site. Get your story out there and encourage others to join in with sharing
what is in their heart. Share the pages and accounts of “What’s Your Story?”
with your friends and tag the pages whenever you craft a form of art.
Spread
a revolution of beauty, a revival of personal creativity. It begins with you.
Never
stop creating, never stop dreaming, and never
stop telling your story.
Art
is everywhere—especially in you. Your story is art. It is anything you choose
to create. You story is waiting…
Everybody’s
got one: this is our story...how will you tell yours?
What are
you waiting for?
#whatsyourstory #yourstoryisart #howwillyoutellit
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