Working as a freelance designer, writer, video editor is hard. Thereâs usually no support â" itâs a lonely road. The most annoying thing about doing creative work on your own is the "creative blocks" (should we call them monsters?) you hit from time to time.
Theyâre scary, those damn monsters. Theyâll get your agent angry, your readers unhappy and your clients running. The reason they attack is because your day-to-day state really affects your work. The way you feel on a consistent basis determines the quality and refinement of your efforts.
But thereâs a way to survive. First you can avoid everything by just making sure you keep the monster inside you happy. Hereâs how.
Recommended Reading: 7 Ways To Increase Your Creativity
Create your micro-cosmos
Your workspace is like the painterâs canvas. Donât keep it clean, keep it inspiring. If youâre a neat, tidy person and order inspires you, then yes, clean it up. If not, and youâre like the majority of creators out there, make sure your workspace is:
- Comfortable for your body
- Isolated/Undisturbed by outside presence
- Easy to get to, preferably in your house
- Has writing equipment for jotting down ideas
- Full of the things you like (no matter how ridiculous others may think it is)
Read Also: 10 Ways To Stay Creative While Working From Home
Set a quota
Set a goal for yourself. If youâre a writer, set a daily amount of pages youâll write. Anthony Trollope, a well-known, successful novelist of the 19th century was known to force himself to write 3000 words (250 words per 15 mins, for 3 hours) before going off to his job at the postal service. This he kept up for 33 years, in the span of which he wrote more than 2 dozen books.
If youâre interested in other funky targets and rituals that creative people have used over the centuries, check out Daily Rituals: How Artists Work.
Set a routine: Donât be afraid to innovate!
Unlike some people think, a routine work schedule helps your creativity in that it helps you achieve the before-mentioned quota. A routine is just another sort of ritual, which takes place in your micro-cosmos.
Here are some examples:
Nude Ritual: Victor Hugo wrote The Hunchback Of Notre-Dame while in his house, totally naked.
"Done by noon, drunk by three" routine: The phrase comes directly from Ernest Hemingway, who used to apply it thoroughly while writing The Old Man And The Sea. He stops working at noon and gets drunk, daily. Fun times.
Writing horizontally or vertically: Albert Camus wrote while standing. Prust, Twain and Orwell did so while lying in bed horizontally. Heck, Kafka is rumoured to have stood on his head for creativity. Whatever floats your boat, really.
Not sleeping: Painter Salvador Dali is famous for his sleep tricks. Heâd use all sorts of waking up mechanisms as soon as sleep would take him â" slipping keys from his hand which banged against carefully placed metal plates for example. He said it made him more productive.
Read Also: How To Condition Your Mind For Higher Productivity
Killing the "Monster"
If all else fails, and you find that youâve awakened the monster, and the giant comes running at you, grabbing you by the neck, you should, with the last life youâve got left in you, do the following.
Start working anyway, despite the fact you donât feel too creative. Donât analyze your work, just compose. No judgement, just creation. Go ahead and create, not thinking about the way in which you do it. Often times, thatâs enough to loosen the monsterâs furry grip.
Read Also: How To Find The Writing Zone And Stay There
If youâre still barely clinging on to life, do the exercises below. Their goal is to jumpstart your brainâs software, literally "warming up" your creativity by putting your synapses and neural pathways to work!
Exercise 1. Inner World Reflection
This comes straight from philosopher Robert Anton Wilsonâs bestseller, Prometheus Rising. In the book, Robert talks about conquering our potential through understanding the way our brain is wired. One of the exercises goes as follows:
Think about the electrons in your body. Then go bigger. Think about the atom containing them and their movement. Then ponder about your molecules. Scale up and think about the nucleus of the cell which contains all that matter. Then the cell itself.
Work your way up through the body, thinking about each tiny bit, constantly increasing the size of the lens through which you look. After that, your body, your room, house, neighborhood, area code, district, city, country, continent, planet. Try to have a satellite view of each, thinking about as many details as possible.
In the end, you should be at the edge of the observable universe. Hereâs a tool to help you with this exercise.
Exercise 2. The Daydream Rapid Synapse Connection
This exercise is my favorite. Itâs tons of fun.
Just pick something to think about. Letâs say a rabbit. Then, as fast as you can, find the next logical connection in your mind. Letâs say rabbit makes you think about running. Then what does running make you think about? Maybe Usain Bolt, maybe the speed of sound or maybe standing still. This exercise works on your own personal universe of mind connections. It should be done for at least a few minutes.
In that time, you should have covered dozens of even hundreds of elements, and youâll find yourself in a very, very different space then when youâve started.
Exercise 3. Inspiration by Visualization
Go online and watch videos like this:
Check out sites like 500px, deviantART, or Tumblr or photography and art blogs such as this. Search for tags such as "weird". Youâll be amazed at what you find.
Exercise 4. Shifting Your Reality Tunnel
Find something youâre really against and write 5 arguments if favor of it. Make it a really taboo topic. Trying to understand somebody elseâs totally different belief system and values (even when they are totally wrong) will develop new neural pathways. Make sure itâs something you have a strong opinion about, like teenage pregnancy, abortion, death penalty or your momâs cooking.
Whatever the topic, shifting your reality tunnel and your beliefs, even for just a moment, by looking through the eyes of "your enemy" is hard â" but itâs sure to get your creative juices flowing.
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