Sunday, September 26, 2010
The Courage to Create- by Sarah Ban Breathnach
I really needed these words today, and thought I would share them with you, just in case you also find them useful. They are excerpts from one of Breathnach's entries in her book Simple Abundance.
"August 14
The Courage to Create
No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader.
No surprise for the writer, no surprise for the reader.
-Robert Frost
Perhaps one of the reasons we fear excavating our authentic selves or encountering the inner artist is because creativity seems too risky. We hear the word 'artist' and we associate the calling with dramatic, self-inflicted doom...
Why should this be so? ...
'Write the truest sentence you know,' Ernest Hemingway encourages the writer in you. ...But in order to be true to a creative work, the artist must journey to the center of the self. Past the conscious sentries in the brain, beyond the barbed wire barricades of the heart, into the trenches of 'truth or dare.' You can't write a true sentence or live authentically if you don't trust yourself. You can't trust yourself without courage.
But how? ...
By showing up. Day in, day out. By not judging how it's going. If it's going at all, that's enough. You can't afford to think about how the work will be received when you're finished. That's not your job. Remember, we're learning to surrender the delivery details of our dreams. Our job, then, is just to do it. It can't be published, produced, performed, or purchased if it doesn't exist.
Today it's time for authentic 'truth or dare.' Dare yourself to believe in your creativity, wherever it may lead you. Trust that where it leads is exactly where you're supposed to be. The word courage comes from the French word for the heart, coeur. Your authentic self knows where you're headed. Don't wrestle with Spirit. Collaborate with it."
"August 14
The Courage to Create
No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader.
No surprise for the writer, no surprise for the reader.
-Robert Frost
Perhaps one of the reasons we fear excavating our authentic selves or encountering the inner artist is because creativity seems too risky. We hear the word 'artist' and we associate the calling with dramatic, self-inflicted doom...
Why should this be so? ...
'Write the truest sentence you know,' Ernest Hemingway encourages the writer in you. ...But in order to be true to a creative work, the artist must journey to the center of the self. Past the conscious sentries in the brain, beyond the barbed wire barricades of the heart, into the trenches of 'truth or dare.' You can't write a true sentence or live authentically if you don't trust yourself. You can't trust yourself without courage.
But how? ...
By showing up. Day in, day out. By not judging how it's going. If it's going at all, that's enough. You can't afford to think about how the work will be received when you're finished. That's not your job. Remember, we're learning to surrender the delivery details of our dreams. Our job, then, is just to do it. It can't be published, produced, performed, or purchased if it doesn't exist.
Today it's time for authentic 'truth or dare.' Dare yourself to believe in your creativity, wherever it may lead you. Trust that where it leads is exactly where you're supposed to be. The word courage comes from the French word for the heart, coeur. Your authentic self knows where you're headed. Don't wrestle with Spirit. Collaborate with it."