Posts Tagged buddhism

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 »

Share

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

Ignorance, Faith, and the Discipline of the Demon Muse, Part 2

As explored in Part 1 of this series, communications from your unconscious mind are recognizable as such by the fact that they occur spontaneously. From your point of view — that is, the viewpoint of you-as-conscious-ego — the voice of the unconscious arrives in the form of involuntary promptings from a separate, independent, autonomous source within your subjectivity. This source — to restate the fundamental insight that animates this blog — is, or is equivalent to, the muse, daimon/daemon, and personal genius of classical antiquity.

(It’s also equivalent to a few additional and equally potent metaphors that we haven’t talked about yet, such as the Spanish duende as described by Federico Garcia Lorca. See “A Writer’s Guide to the Psyche, Part 1” and Part 2 for more detail about the daimon and such.)

Learning the specific “language” of your unconscious mind is therefore crucial to the cultivation of an empowered creative life. It doesn’t do you much good if your genius is trying to speak to you but you can’t understand it, or if you don’t even recognize the sound of its voice.

What you have to do is figure out, via careful attentiveness to your inner states of mind and emotion, the form(s) and the channel(s) by which and in which your inner partner wants to communicate and collaborate. We’ve already explored the general idea and some specific techniques by which you can get to know your daemon’s character (see “Getting to Know Your Creative Demon, Part 1,” Part 2, and Part 3). Now it’s time to take a look at what’s effectively the converse side of things by considering the specific ways in which your daemon tries to make itself and its wishes known to you. Read the rest of this entry »

Share

Tags: brewster ghiselin, buddhism, carl jung, creative unconscious, creativity, daemon, daimon, dorothea brande, dorothy canfield, duende, eckhart tolle, federico garcia lorca, fourth way, genius, gurdjieff, h.p. lovecraft, james bonnet, john gardner, mindfulness, morning pages, muse, religion, sandra lee dennis, Tapping the Creative Unconscious, unconscious mind, zen

SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline