Posts Tagged active waiting

Spontaneous Authorial Flow: 5 Ways to Encourage the Mother Lode of Creative Gifts

We all want it, of course: that sense of being guided in our work by a golden thread of inspiration. It’s one of the most purely exhilarating experiences on the human experiential spectrum. You feel like what you’re writing (drawing, composing, conceiving, constructing, cultivating) is emerging effortlessly, perfectly, and you’re just the conduit. The right words and turns of phrase spring spontaneously from your fingers. Your powers and energies seem mysteriously and exquisitely aligned to bring forth exactly what you mean, and even — holy of holies, the mother lode of creative gifts — to release things you didn’t consciously know you wanted to say, but that greet you with a staggering sense of rightness when they land there on the page.

“Everybody enjoys it now and then,” says Lawrence Block in his oh-so-wonderful Telling Lies for Fun and Profit: A Manual for Fiction Writers, “when the words flow effortlessly and you feel plugged into the universal mind and the stuff on the page is worlds better than what you had in mind when you sat down. This doesn’t happen very often, but I’ll tell you it’s a kick when it does.”

Yes, it’s a kick when it happens — but it’s a sharper one when it doesn’t, and especially when you’re not just lacking that flow but are positively possessed by its opposite state. Many times in my moments of creative block, I have thought of Block’s words — and have hated them. I have thought of Kierkegaard’s description of an authorial state in which his ideas seemed to emerge fully formed, with exquisite perfection — and I have cringed. What sounds inspiring when you’re in a positive state sounds revolting and crushing when you’re in a negative one, and I have known all too well those extended states when the opposite energy from Kierkegaard’s comes over me, and everything I write emerges deformed, stillborn, or both. Maybe you’ve known this state, too.

So the question, naturally, is how to experience the divine flow state and not its opposite, how to generate or receive it, if indeed it’s a state that is accessible to effort instead of a purely supernatural-seeming endowment that categorically eludes our attempts at controlling it.

Here are several suggestions, ranging from the practical to the theoretical, that stem from my own experience and that of several other writers and artists. As you’ll see, some of these suggestions are distinctly more mundane and concrete than the psychologically and philosophically oriented advice I’ve previously offered at this blog. Remember, we’re examining creativity as a relationship between you and an independent, or independent-feeling, force or presence in your psyche. That means we’re looking at creative work as growing out of a relationship between you and the whatever-it-is in your soulspace: your muse, daimon, genius. Sometimes, as in our relationships with other people, we have to work on ourselves; sometimes, in the most humble of ways. Read the rest of this entry »

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Tags: 10000 hours, active imagination, active waiting, carl jung, Dealing with Creative Block, flow, jonathan fields, julie heffernan, kay redfield jamison, kierkegaard, lawrence block, malcolm gladwell, matthew mcconaughey, meditation, mindfulness, Steven Pressfield, writer's block

Stoking Your Creative Fire: Learn the Art of Active Waiting

WaitingTo repeat a point we explored previously in “Stoking Your Creative Fire: Embrace Your Creative Demon’s Rhythm (1),” it’s vital in creative work that you learn to embrace the recurring fallow periods during which you feel like you’re not getting anything done, since these are the times when your unconscious genius is performing its magic by going to work on things you’ve learned and planned through conscious effort, and is transmuting them via a process of psychological alchemy into the stuff of inspired originality.

However, and as also stated previously, we’ve got to recognize that not all waiting is alike. It’s common to think of waiting as a passive activity, a non-action that’s indistinguishable from idleness. But the type of waiting that’s involved in creative work is anything but idle. In fact, it’s highly active, so much so that you may be just as well served by thinking of it as an aggressive courting of your demon muse, a kind of “come-on” that encourages your inner partner to provide the hoped-for influx of inspiration.

For an helpfully illustrative analogy, I direct your attention to field of religion, where we find millions of people engaged in a type of waiting that’s directly analagous, not just broadly but quite specifically, to the type of waiting we need to learn in regard to our daemonic inner collaborator. Read the rest of this entry »

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Tags: active waiting, Bible, buddhism, Christianity, david ulrich, eckhart tolle, Jesus, ray bradbury, religion, Shunryu Suzuki, spirituality, Steven Pressfield, The Power of Now, zen

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