Today is VETERANS DAY.
God bless our troops all over the world who are sacrificing their lives every single day
to protect our right to live in freedom and to write whatever we please.
Thanks will never be enough.
I thought you might like to read something you can actually use, so here are some tips I jotted down several years ago while I was falling asleep over a translation job. Enjoy.
11 Tips For Surviving a Day Job with Your Creativity Intact
There’s no doubt about it—maintaining a day job while everything in you is roaring in another direction is one of the toughest things a creative soul can endure.
If you’re keeping body and soul together for hourly wages and find yourself too tired or distracted or frustrated to be creative after work, you’re not alone. It can be a superhuman challenge to sustain creative energy so that the switch to art or writing is even possible once you get home.
Here are a few of the many things you can do to keep your creative thread running when you can’t be in your studio or at your writing desk.
1. Name your vision.
If you’re in love with a particular medium, you’re heads above the crowd because you know what you want to do. And once you know what you want to do, you can create a vision of how to express that in your life.
If you love to dance, your vision may be to choreograph your own dances or have a dance troupe. If you love to work with color, your vision may be to paint lots of canvases or illustrate children’s books.
Your vision functions much like the keel on a sailboat, cutting through the sea to keep the boat upright.
If you’re working a day job and feel the urge to make art but have no larger vision, you probably find yourself scraping through the day with annoyance gnawing holes in your belly, saddled with a general sense of dissatisfaction and malaise.
This isn’t surprising, as you have nothing to carry you through the everyday, and your feet soon start to drag in the sand. Visions are buoyant bubbles that lift the heart and make it sing. What’s your vision for your art? What do you really want to do?
2. Set a creative goal that will keep you moving.
Once you know what your vision is, you can bring it to life by setting a goal and working towards it.
While we’re very familiar with setting goals within the scope of individual projects, we may not have thought much about setting goals for the larger context within which we’re working. Many artists feel uncomfortable with speaking about their art in terms of goals, preferring to “make art for art’s sake.” But goals can be applied creatively to even the most process-oriented methods.
It may appear that creative souls require absolute freedom from restrictions in order to thrive, but this is just one of the many myths surrounding productive artists and their work. Productive artists do set goals and work toward them with consistency and persistence, and it is exactly this that fosters the growth and advancement for which the human spirit yearns. A goal that serves your vision will give your everyday activities meaning and clarity.
3. Begin the night before.
Now it’s time to break the big goal down into do-able steps. What are your three most important goals for the next day?
Before you go to bed, think about the three most important things to do the next day to bring you closer to your goal. Now write them down. If you know that you want to publish a novel or exhibit your paintings, your daily goals can comprise small but consistent concrete steps toward that end. If your aim is to explore your medium without worrying too much about a product, decide what you want out of that exploration (fun, challenge, greater self-knowledge), and then think of small things you can do each day to make it happen.
By writing down your goals the night before, you’re already ahead of the game when you wake up in the morning. Choose your goals realistically, keeping in mind the time and energy required for your job. Don’t be too hard on yourself; you’re learning to balance.
4. Get up early.
Don’t laugh—those extra moments or hours can be the most productive of your day. Just one extra half-hour in the morning can result in a chapter outline or five more woven inches on the loom. The stillness of the early hours is a fine time to concentrate. If you use the time wisely, you’ll be miles ahead of the rest of your time zone.
Not everyone functions well in the morning, however, and you may resist this idea. Please don’t discount it until you give it a fair try. The body can adjust to almost anything, and it takes a good three weeks to assume a new habit.
Give yourself a month of early rising before you go back to burning the midnight oil. Just remember to set your goals the night before so you’re clear in the morning about why you got out of bed—don’t give yourself an excuse to crawl back under the covers. If you’re still too tired when the alarm goes off, consider going to bed earlier. If the early morning hours turn out to be the best practical time for you to make progress on your work, it’s a small price to pay. And you may be pleasantly surprised!
5. Design a morning ritual and do it every day.
Ritual is like the steady tick-tock of the minute hand through our lives. It keeps us on track and moving forward. A ritual is a reverent and purposeful act designed to focus energy and concentration.
Rituals are intensely intimate and private acts, so there are as many possibilities as there are individuals. Yours may involve writing or painting for a certain time each day, meditating, dancing, walking to a special tree, reciting a poem. A fifteen-minute ritual in the morning is all it takes to start your day with a creative act that will reverberate through all your subsequent movements and activities.
Make it small and keep it simple, something easily hold-able in your heart for the rest of the day. Consecrate that act to your art and do it every morning. Watch it take root and secure the soil in which it grows.
6. Learn to do the Lifeboat Exercise.
In his marvelous little Creativity Book, Eric Maisel suggests doing the Lifeboat Exercise once a day for three days in a row, but I find it works well as a life raft all year long.
Find yourself a raucous bell, he says. Ring your bell loudly and shout, “Create!” Go to your workspace, set a timer for ten minutes, and work. When the timer goes off, shout, “All clear!” You’ve just made ten minutes progress on your creative work and fed the connection to your heart.
Now, it may be that your day job is located in such a place that you are not able to ring a raucous bell and yell, “Create!” without jarring your neighbors. That’s all right. Set your computer timer to alert you silently and perhaps at random, or simply stop for your ten minutes when you can. Take a ten-minute break in a quiet spot and scribble some notes on your novel or carry water-soluble colored pencils and a small sketchbook. Outline the next act of your play.
A lot can happen during a ten-minute break. Just do it the best way you can. But it might be wise to practice ringing bells and yelling when you get home. Stopping whatever you’re doing to create for ten minutes is an invaluable survival skill, and practicing drills at home can save your life out in the world.
7. Set a theme for the day.
Just as you would identify the underlying theme of a story or a sculpture, you can declare a theme for yourself and give your day the characteristics of a work of art, allowing the parts to inform one another with more intent.
You might choose to heighten your experience by looking at the day through the filter of a project you’re working on, or you may decide to play with a new theme, such as gentleness or rapture, that speaks to current states of your heart and that just may become the theme of an actual project. The point is to see the day (and the day job) as a work of art rather than a series of drudgeries keeping you from your true vocation.
Your art is everywhere in your life—it is your life and your life is your art. Practice holding this truth in your awareness and you will never be bored.
8. Practice relevance.
It’s easy to see our day jobs as intrusions on our valuable time and basically irrelevant to the important things in our lives. Practicing relevance can enhance the productivity of those hours by influencing both the day job tasks and our own art.
I’ve been a day-job translator for many years. I sit at my computer, sometimes falling asleep as I slog through other people’s texts, all the while dreaming of my own unfinished work as the frustration rises—until I start to look for the relevance, that is. Suddenly, I’m gleaning all sorts of marketing tips from promotional texts, examples of style from annual reports (including what not to do), and interesting topics from just about everything else.
Staying awake to what our paid work has to offer our creative work enriches the moment, makes the time go faster, and enhances the quality of everything we do.
9. Put on the headphones and crank up the volume.
Don’t underestimate the power of fun to jog the energy and get it moving in a more creative direction.
Listen to music, if you can. If you work at home, pet your dog. Open a window and breathe in some fresh air. Walk around the hallways and do a little dance when no one’s looking. Tell a joke and make someone smile. Pack yourself an unusual lunch. Have a cappuccino instead of tea.
Fun is everywhere in this wonderful universe, just there for the picking. Plan a reward for yourself when you get home—a hot bath, a good meal, a comedy on DVD. Laugh. Relaxing into laughter or contentment renews the connection with your creative self. It can also be as refreshing as a nap. Clear the fuzz, blast through the cement ceiling in your head, welcome in some sunshine, and let the energy flow.
As artists, our media may appear to be stone or words or movement or music, but as creative souls our medium is energy. You cannot use energy creatively if you stop it from flowing; you won’t have any material to work with. Be its friend, invite it in, learn to dance.
10. Surround yourself with who you are.
Everyone in every job has at least two inches of workspace they can call their own. You may have a desk or a locker or an entire office to yourself. Bring your inspiration to work, and don’t be shy.
Decorate your office, select a motivational screen saver, dress the part (if you can). Surround yourself as much as possible with what you do and what you love. It will bolster your spirits, remind you of who you are and what’s important to you. Do not be afraid of using props—be a stage designer.
My painting teacher was fond of hanging plastic wrap from the ceiling across the width of a room to demonstrate that light was traveling through the space we occupied and affecting the colors of the objects we saw. For years afterward, I would drape plastic wrap from whatever ceiling I could, wherever I worked, wherever it was tolerated, to remind myself of what I wanted to remember.
Be creative in designing your stage. See working with the limitations of your workspace as an artistic challenge. Learn to see yourself and your vision for yourself reflected in your environment, wherever you are.
11. Be grateful.
Gratitude is a prosperous and productive state of mind, and absolutely essential to true creativity. Remembering to be grateful for the fact that we’re earning money at all and putting food on the table keeps us open to the positive things that come our way throughout the day.
Gratitude for what we do have, not resentment about what we don’t have, is what makes it possible for the Universe to send us what we want. It keeps a smile close to our lips and makes us much more pleasant to be around. Gratitude is a miraculous blessing, because while we’re being grateful for the gifts that have been given us, the very act of being grateful benefits us in ways we cannot count.
Practice being grateful, deeply grateful, for a short period of time and see how you feel. If you’re having trouble giving thanks because you can’t see past your lack of money or time or the necessities of life, try starting with air, sunshine (or rainfall), blades of grass, leaves on trees, roofs over heads.
Abundance is all around us. Once you start naming the blessings that surround you, you may not be able to stop.
. . .
Each of these points deserves a book of its own, and there are many more tiles in the ever-surprising mosaic of creative process. For now, just start where you are. Look at your day job as the blessing it is. Use your formidable creativity to honor your art every day.
Examine your big vision, select a goal or two, and watch everything in your life align as you move steadily and surely toward your heart’s desire.
-- by Durga Walker © 2005
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