Make Time To Create
I’m a creative person. I like to learn, explore, create, and reflect. I like to observe, attempt, try, and retry.
Recently, I’ve noticed a pattern. The busier I get and the more tired I am, the less likely I am to be creative. To chase ideas. To tap into my creativity.. Sure, I MAY still think of ideas, but without the time and energy to do anything with them, they remain just that...ideas.
As a kid, after hours of playing baseball in the backyard, my siblings and I would hang around as dusk crept in, waiting for the chance to catch fireflies. The darker it got, the easier their light was to see, though only briefly. They’d flash their light and we’d quickly dash over, attempting to catch them in our hands. The closer you were to the flash, the easier it was to find and catch them. The further away or the longer we took to get there, the higher the chances of losing them.
The busier I get and the more tired I
am, the less likely I am to be creative.
Creative ideas are kind of like lightning bugs. The initial idea flashes in a bright light of brilliance. You can clearly see it. When it shines, you know exactly where it is and what it is. You can reach out to it and touch it. But, the light doesn’t last forever; it fades. And as it fades, so does your memory of it. It requires our time and attention at the moment. If you don’t pay attention or act on them, the moment of inspiration that emerged from the spark fades, leaving you with yet another partial idea that will soon be forgotten in your phone’s voice memos. (Maybe that’s just me. 😊)
What are some things you can do to more consistently tap into your creativity and seize ideas when they come?
- Change your mindset - Move from ‘what if’ to ‘check this out’ by actively creating. As Nike says, Just Do It. Creativity requires vulnerability. The act of creating is something you do for yourself, but once created and shared, it is a gift for others. It is no longer yours to own, but something for others to receive. With sharing comes feedback and the potential for criticism and judgment. It’s this vulnerability that causes many people to stop before they even get started. They get stuck in ‘What ifs’ and ‘Somedays’. What if I did xxx? Someday, I’d love to create yyy. A slightly different mindset can make this easier to embrace. If the creation is the gift to yourself, the feedback is just that, feedback. It is not a reflection of the gift you’ve already received but of someone else’s view of the gift you’ve given. You get to choose what you do with that feedback. Dismiss it or use it to iterate, that is their gift back to you, the creator.
- Schedule creativity - One of my favorite creativity quotes comes from William Faulkner responding to the question ‘When does creativity strike?’. He said, “I only write when inspiration strikes. Fortunately, it strikes at nine every morning.” You don’t need to wait for inspiration to strike to be creative. Consistently making time for creativity to occur opens the door for creativity and inspiration to emerge. It signals to your brain that this is something you do AND have prioritized. That you have made time for it. Set aside time, sit down, and create. From that, there’s no telling what you’ll be able to create!
- Seek boredom, regularly - It’s incredibly easy to move from task to task. There are so many things to do and your list just keeps on growing. But, for creativity to flourish, we must make time for boredom. Boredom gives our minds time to reflect, process, and assimilate the new information we’re absorbing in a variety of ways. Schedule regular chunks of time in your calendar for boredom.
- Get plenty of rest and nutrition - Whether you know it or not, your brain is a creative powerhouse. Accessing your creativity requires energy and that’s where sleep and nutrition come in; they are just as important for creativity as it is for deep concentrated problem-solving. Maintaining a consistent sleep schedule, getting adequate rest, and consistently good nourishment are important for consistent longer-term creativity.
- Live in the messy - Creativity hides within everything we do. When we seek perfection or run towards the execution of a predetermined path, we put up guardrails for what success looks like. We limit our perspective. We reduce the exploration of alternative paths. We limit new findings that may alter our perspective and approach. Living in the messy means we allow ourselves to experience the journey towards completeness. We consider what’s working well, and what’s not. We take in new ideas and evolve our perspective. We ideate alternative paths. We test our work. And we continually return to the problem we’re attempting to solve.






