“Creativity is really the structuring of magic.” Ann Kent Rusk
- Art comes from the skill of creating in music, sculpture, painting, or dance.
- Productivity comes from the process of creating in business.
- When two people have a deep bond and naturally express love for one another, they are using the process of creating.
- Technology uses the skill of creating for inventions.
- Vitality, adventure, expansion come when you begin to use the creative process to design your life.
Each one of these is a form of creating. Each one is different. Even though there is a process in creating results, it cannot be defined by a formula or in a manual. There are books that attempt to describe a process for learning to play the guitar. People will give you formulas for learning to ski or drive a car. People who call themselves experts will give you all kinds of methods and procedures on how to raise your children. Experts will give you a system for how best to love your partner and stay together. Everyone has a tip or technique to share that will fix something about you or the situation.
These tips, formulas and procedures attempt to make all these things sound predictable. I’m sorry, but in my experience, even after a great lesson on the slopes, when you get out there on your own and you are sailing down hill with sticks on your feet and poles in your hands, it is not predictable! Elizabeth Gilbert said it so well in her book, Committed, you may have read the latest and greatest books on childrearing, but when the nurse puts that baby on your lap in your car, on your way home, you are thinking, “they are actually sending this home with me….Oh, …..”
There may be many things about raising a baby, skiing, driving a car that are predictable. When a baby cries, they want something. If you snowplow, you will slow down. When you push on the brakes, you will come to a stop. But, there are many more things that are unpredictable. Likewise, the process of creating is predictable and unpredictable. It involves reason and intuition. It is a balance of thinking and emotions. As the composer Robert Fritz says, it is both composition and improvisation. When you are creating you are constantly adjusting and learning and readjusting.
There is content to be learned to apply in the process of creating. But the form that reveals itself in the process will be unique to the creator. Skiers may have taken lessons form the same instructor and they may apply similar technique, but as they learn and become more proficient at the skill of skiing they will add their own touches. They will involve their own unique personal flare. When the skis become part of them, each one will have their own way of applying the content of skiing, but the outcome will look unique to them. The process of creating is individual. You personalize it according to your personality, strengths, aspirations, idiosyncrasies, interests, challenges, and experience.
In the self-help world it is common to give tips and techniques that will lead everyone to success. You have probably read several. I have. We all know them well. Follow this step-by-step process to success. Do these affirmations five times a day for six weeks and you will have a red Porsche in your driveway. Take this six hour class and you will become rich, famous, and absolutely gorgeous. Right? You’ve seen and heard it all.
Golf is a great example of people clamoring for the latest tip that will change their game over night and cause them to shoot par thereafter. The game of golf cannot be put into tip after tip. Each shot is different and the game is individual to each person. The tip might actually work during the lesson. It may even work for a round or two. But eventually something will happen and the tip will not be effective. Then the person often blames the tip, or the instructor or coach. They very rarely take into consideration that it just might be them that needs to learn differently. The tip will not fix them or give them eyes to see their blind spots. First of all, they don’t need fixed. They need a new way of seeing.
Whether it is the process of raising a child, learning to ski, or playing golf, the distinct elements of each cannot be put in a bottle and sold to everyone without taking into account the individual. There are certain things that must be done and there are things that absolutely must NOT be done. There is technique and there is a skill. But if someone simply learns the technique and tries to apply it to every circumstance, they will not succeed. There is a need for the integration of technique, thinking, feeling, and experience. There is a need for learning, not simply reacting.
It is the same with the creative process. There is content to be learned. There is a process to follow. There are principles to apply. But all of that will be presented, absorbed, learned, and applied differently with each individual. And, even though the content may be presented in a linear fashion, the way it unfolds is very rarely in a straight line. The content will unfold into a unique form depending on the person moving through the process. Once the process becomes part of the person, they can use and apply it in whatever circumstance presents itself. Why? Because they have learned the process, they are not just responding or reacting to a situation. It is not the process that works. It is the person.
The same creative process can be applied to composing a piece of music, building a business, deepening a relationship, being a mother, a CEO of a huge corporation, a writer, or a filmmaker. The same principles apply to different aspects of life, at home, leisure and at work. They are fundamental to the process of creating.
What a difference between that way of seeing and constantly searching for the latest tip that you hope will work! When you learn based on “the you” who is learning, it is not the tip that works to create success in your life. It is you. You are the power behind the creating. This moves you from victim to creator. (More on that some other time.) How do you begin?
Sometimes you don’t have to do anything. You just simply need to notice, or look. We don’t think of “looking at” as a skill, but it is a powerful practice. Having the presence, or mindfulness, to notice what you are thinking, feeling, wanting is a valuable competence. The ability to notice how you are being for yourself, others, and the world is a skill worth pursuing. Can it be mastered? I think a different way to see it is “being about mastery”.
Noticing what we are thinking, feeling, wanting expands our awareness and gives us choices. In a way, having the ability to notice is a freeing experience. It frees us from reacting, and moves us to creating. Noticing is a step in enhancing our awareness. We will explore the power of awareness later. As the Harvard educator, Tim Galwey said, “Awareness is curative.” Awareness is a key component on the CORE Journey.
Over the next week, notice how you look for tips on how to do things. How often do you look outside yourself for the right way to respond? How often do you relinquish the power for creating to some outside person, agency, or situation? Keep a written log as if you were writing your story. You are!