I thought it was going to be a gung-ho, high energy, fast-paced week 3. But what do I find myself doing on my artist's date?….Hunting round antique and junk stores for vintage quilts and lace pillow cases….
Last week I bought two duck and goose pillows for my bed….now a beautiful vintage quilt is mine! While my intention was to write my book, my inner artist is quietly building me a nest, with lots of feathers.
My son Charlie has a sleepover tonight, I've been invited out but all I want to do is retire to my nest with my portable DVD player, the box set of the Sopranos and a large mug of tea.
Is it just me? Is anyone else retreating? Is your inner artist doing their own thing this week?
Guest Blogger Gina Langton says:
Week 3 is a massive
chapter – I think it’s really the pivotal point at where AW’s purpose becomes
clear. It says to me, if you want
to unblock then start really nailing those internal culprits – those dreadful
stealers of creativity.
To be honest, not only am
I feeling angry, but frustrated and bereft as well. And I have to admit I’ve
found my hand down the cereal packet a couple of times (does anyone else do
that?). That’s because there’s too much information to deal with in Chapter 3 –
at least that’s what I’ve been telling myself and that I can’t cope with it
all. I observe feelings of
meltdown, but I’m not giving in to them.
Of course, it’s half term,
and the kids are home from school, so that doesn’t help, but almost everything
else in my environment has been conspiring to get in the way too. Such as the
need to polish bathroom taps, clean out the fridge, and wash the kitchen floor
(even when the daily is coming in tomorrow!) – anything to stop me from writing
this blog, and that’s not all I have to do today. And to top it all, yesterday
I pranged the car. But isn’t this always the way when we are deeply challenging
our lives?
It’s all that junk we’ve
brought ourselves up on – the uncreative dialogues we’ve been re-running in our
heads day in day out. They are
powerfully delusional and energy sapping. Becoming aware about shame and
criticism is essential to my future growth, but I’m not going to give myself a
hard time about it – what’s passed has passed. I must allow myself to believe
that the universe is responsive and intelligent, and as soon as I dare to risk,
leap, determine, and dream with renewed spiritual open mindedness, that’s when
magical things happen. Synchronicity. I have been there before. I think a lot
of us have – I just need reminding sometimes.
So I’m bringing the
panic/anger levels down a little, taking a few deep breaths, looking for things
to be grateful for, praying a little bit more, and reassuring myself in a
parental kind of way. Actually,
things aren’t so bad. I can deal
with this stuff of the past. Also
I had quite a successful AW week 2.
I managed to write my morning pages 7/7, do most of the tasks and squeezed in
a very enjoyable solo visit to the cinema to see the latest Woody Allen movie.
Things are moving along nicely.
I chose to do AW, because
I needed a catalyst to help me break through a serious impasse. I am aware my
anger is different today, because it is precipitating a need for me to take
action – and I’m feeling excited – I agree with Suzy that this is going to be a
dynamic week. Happily, I have got the bit between my teeth (although I am still
quite tempted to scream). I have AW, a nurturing group of co-AW-ees, and my
healthy warrior-style anger –I’m not going to allow myself the luxury of
procrastination or flipping out – I am going to pay those bills, write that
report, do my expenses, and very importantly re-set my dreams.
Thank you Suzy for giving
me this opportunity to share my thoughts, and here’s to a great week everyone!
Week 3 of the Artist's Way and here I am staying in a castle that Hans Christian Anderson wrote about in his fairy tales. My friends Michael and Lissen live here (in fairytale castle, as you do!) and they have both so much to teach me in terms of creativity.
Michael is a food and motoring writer – writing books prolifically about his culinary journeys to Japan, Paris and now Denmark – with lovely his family in tow. His last book Sacre Cordon Bleu was Radio 4's book of the week. Michael is a living, breathing example of earning a wonderful living from his creativity, while also living a lifestyle that most of us would kill for.
They don't own the castle – but rent it and stay here for a while, soaking up the atmosphere and creating a stable base for a few months. Because next they're all off to India for Michael's next book, about their gastronomic and spiritual journey to India. The past three years, they lived in the middle of Paris, while he wrote about his journey to be a cordon bleu chef! They live a millionaire lifestyle without the millions, are creative every day and their lives are an incredible adventure.
Michael got here by being brave. And as Michael will admit, he's not a brave man. But he takes risks every day. He risks being rejected, risks getting it wrong, risks failure. Now he is reaping the benefits of his risks but at the beginning (we met at journalist school) it wasn't always this good. Michael inspires me because he has kept going, taking risks, knocks, rejections – and he's a sensitive soul so it's not been easy. But he has persevered despite the internal and external blurts that could have potentially floored him.
I introduced him to his wife Lissen, one of my favourite friends and they have now been married 10 years. Lissen is equally creative and makes fantastic jewellery and runs her own jewellery business. www.lissenm.com Her inspiration for her jewellery is imperfection! "It's the flaws I like in people and life. That's what makes people and life interesting. Once you give up on being perfect and truly embrace our imperfection – you can start living and playing from a very free place. It's a fun way to live life. Especially in Denmark, as we are generally a race known for living by the rules. It's interesting to see what happens to you when you refuse to live by the rules that everyone else thinks you should."
What happened to Lissen and Michael is that they get to live an adventure every day, and today, it's in a castle. I hold them up as my inspiration of what happens when you truly surrender to your creativity and think big.
So for me, ending Week 2 spending my time with the opposite of 'crazymakers' can only be good thing.
Week 3, we're recovering a sense of power. And I love the validation of anger! Being a good girl and people pleaser, I've always found it really hard to roar in anger but recently, I've become really good at it. So I was ever so pleased to read that: "Anger tells us that your old life is dying. It tells us we are being reborn, and birthing hurts…..Anger is the firestorm that signals the death of our old life…Anger will tell us when we have betrayed ourselves. It will always tell us that it is time to act in our won best interests. Anger is not the action itself. It is action's invitation."
So this week is about taking action – whether you are angry or not.
It's also about synchronicity. When life opens the doors in an unexpectedly spooky and fabulous way.
I think it's going to be dynamic week.
Enjoy.
Week 3 Exercises:
Morning pages – keep it up!
Your Artist's Date – what's your plan?
And make sure you do at least half the exercises at the end of the chapter. Do the ones you like the look of and the ones you have the most resistant to.
I know this is really, really cheesy but I loved it. And re. the Artist's Way, it made me think.
Imagine if we had an inner validator like this guy…..imagine what would happen to our blurts?
So, if you're not put off by the whole cheesiness of this video, try some internal validation today.
"Gee, do you know that you're a talented genius? And you have lovely eyes, and that sentence was just wonderful…." I
Watch the video…
"I am so
glad that I committed to doing the Artist's Way
this time around. It helps knowing that
so many others are there with me, working through it also, albeit in our own
personal ways. I was skeptical, as I have a tendency to take on too much, and
was worried I'd give up half way through. But, I am feeling determined! As
Jules wrote in the chat room earlier this week – we are a 'brave tribe' – taking
the time, and making the effort to try and make positive changes in our lives,
even though the process to get there can be painful and massively challenging at
times.
have no problems in writing 3 pages each day for my morning pages, although I
also feel that it is sometimes a chore as others have mentioned. So far my
morning pages have been alot of negative ranting, and because its a safe
environment to let it all out, I've reluctantly found myself writing about
issues that maybe I brushed under the carpet before. However, this negative
ranting did not make me feel good – where were all the creative thoughts,
'lightbulb' moments, real breakthroughs in understanding parts of my life?
have spent many years on developing myself from reading books, attending courses
and workshops, to meditation retreats and working in the complementary and
alternative health field. It is an integral part of my life now -
self-development – and I do believe in natural ways to help and nurture
ourselves, and have built up a repertoire of useful resources and tools over the
years to support me when I need it (e.g. meditation techniques, the use of
herbal remedies, yoga and eating well). However, although I know how to make
myself feel good – WHY do I not call upon these wonderful tools more
often!?
point is, its all very well reading, learning and realising what is good for
us…but it is no good unless we actually practice these things, and experience
first hand how they make us feel. Maybe this is why I find resistance to some
of the Artist's Way work – when I start seeing my negative rants appear in my
morning pages, I am confronted with the fact that despite my years of
self-development learning…there is still so much I need to face and really
change. I have already questioned, here in Week 2, whether a) I 'throw in the
towel' as I have done so many times before, when faced with my own issues, and
carry on regardless, or do I b) decide that this time I will work through it,
despite making me feel uncomfortable at times, and make real strides towards
positive change. By doing the Artist's Way I am choosing
b)!
am a self-confessed 'Scanner' (a term I've only recently come to know, but
immediately identified with!), always wanting to learn more, more, more…yet,
this time my greatest challenge is being practical and DOING more, more, more!
So, sitting down with a pad and pen as part of the Artist's Way process, and
trying to pinpoint who my self-confidence sabateurs have been in the past, who
assisted in stifling my creativity – that, for me is really DOING – and is so
hard for me to identify…maybe because I've buried the real answers for so
long. Am still trying to fathom this bit out! Thinking about what affirmations
will help me, and then having to deal with the blurts, that is really DOING -
and takes work for me. Then, practicing the affirmations so that, over time my
unconscious mind is convinced that these are my new beliefs, and to forget my
outdated negative beliefs - that is DOING…and is, again, a real effort for
me. Still working on this!!
perfection, as I was putting pressure on myself to do…here in Week 2, I'm
trying to relax a bit, and do as much as I can…picking those tasks which I
would enjoy, plus some I'm resistant too. Rather than racing through the
process, I'm trying to sit back and let it all sink in, and actually DO the
practice required (affirmations etc.) and keep this course as a sacred thing for
myself – only to be shared with like-minded souls while I work through it…the
brave tribe!"
Caite posted today that she is finding the pages a chore, that she's not getting anything great or deep or profound from them and it's making her feel vaguely martyrlike….
The morning pages are one of Julia Cameron's key tools. And she might say that you are resistant, Caite.
I found myself resistant last week, spitting and huffing and puffing at the page. But something's changed this week, and I'm spewing like a green rage fountain. It's not pleasant or fragant but better out than in, I say.
Would you be willing to keep on going with the pages, Caite. Commit to work through the resistance – if that's what it is and keep us posted.
It would be good to hear how others are finding it. Although check out the chat room in the Big Leap Zone – there's a lot of conversation about the morning pages there too, Caite. (the password is LEAP)
Suzy x
We made it through week 1. I found myself go through a lot of resistance in week 1. I only managed to do the morning pages 4/7. Too busy, said my inner pessimist. 'Stop messing about with this creativity crap, get back to the real work.' So he was quite loud and proud in my head. How about you….?
Affirmations? Did anyone try them? ..I changed my affirmations to appreciations and gratitude. Every day once I had splurged on the page my moanings and bitching and blah-ing in my morning pages, I ended by writing down 5 things I appreciate about my life and 5 things I'm grateful for. Why? Because my inner pessimist only shows up when I'm scared and did you know according to medical psychologists it is
neurologically impossible for your brain to create emotions such as gratitude
and appreciation while simultaneously feeling afraid?
So that's been helping me this week. Still off the wine, which is also helping me enormously to get to what's really bothering me. When I'm not whining in my morning pages about wine, I drop down a level so I'm talking about the things that are swilling a bit deeper in my psyche.
How did you find the exercises this week? I think I loved the Imaginary Lives one the best. I want to be scuba diving instructor when I grow up.
I didn't like the exercise about writing the letter to enemy but it was cathartic. How did you find it?
Let's chat in the Big Leap Zone if you don't want to comment here. Go to www.thebig-leap.com and go to the big leap zone and then use the password LEAP.
So WEEK 2 BEGINS….This week we are recovering a sense of safety – choosing our creative playmates
wisely and creating strong boundaries around the rest.
I love the part about CRAZYMAKERS in this chapter. I've been on both sides of the fence with this one. I've had all manner of crazymakers in my life and I think I may have been a crazy maker once or twice too.
I love the exercises in this chapter too because it gets us firmly focussing on what do we enjoy….and often I think we just completely lose sight of that – of our own wants and needs. I've just come out of a 15 year marriage and that's one of the most extraordinary things I'm rediscovering – MY wants and needs (versus having to factor in someone else.) It's lovely to be selfish again and indulge in my choices of music and decoration and films.
And I love the exercise about 10 Tiny Changes….Can I start us off….?
I would like to….buy a duck down pillow for my bed.
Other Exercises this week:
Morning pages every day if you can.
Plan your artist's date.
And try out some of the exercises at the end of the chapter – try the ones that look the most fun and the ones that you have the most resistance too.
Enjoy this week!
Well, I told you I had a hot artist's date.
Watched this great film – yes, it's really called Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snoggin – a coming of an age movie about a 15 year old in Eastbourne. Perfect for my inner 15 year old artist child – who needed to be told that I don't have to be perfect to be loved or fabulous….
http://www.angusthongsmovie.com/intl/uk/
How did everyone else get on with their artist's dates?
I'm off to indulge my artist child tonight with a trip to Blockbusters. I know….doesn't sound spectacular but I love films and I can't think of anything better than sinking down in front of a big fire with Oscar and watching a good film – with a very, very big bag of popcorn. (Got to replace the wine with something!)
Will let you know what my artist child chooses….
What about you? Have you already gone on your artist's date? Are you saving it for this weekend?
Will post on Sunday night for the start of week 2.
Suzy x
Thank you jules for that lovely honest post.
Here's the talk I did at Scanners night a couple of weeks ago on exactly this subject…
http://www.scannercentral.co.uk/audio/scannersnight090120.mp3
It's how we constantly hope that we'll be happy if we achieve this/do that/get this published/are thin/rich/succesful etc. Only to find out that happiness does not live over the rainbow but right here in the present.
Have a listen – would love to hear your thoughts. This is what Cameron is ultimately telling us, I think. Enjoy the journey, and take the focus off the destination. Enjoy the process versus putting all our emphasis on the 'deal'.






