Archive for the 'Work Life' Category



Want to be more creative? Be a failure!

My eight-year-old daughter has a pet cantaloupe. The errant melon appeared in our truck after a party last weekend; she discovered it in on the floor in the back seat as we were getting ready to leave. Was it a practical joke? Was it a case of mistaken vehicle? We’ll never know. But instantly, my daughter decided it would make a great pet. She named it Bob. He looks quite nice in her visor, don’t you think?

I am telling you this because taking chances–in your creative work, in your life, in business–is a tricky business, unless you are eight years old and don’t realize that no one has a pet cantaloupe or you have heaps of self-esteem and could give a hoot what people think of you. Since the only eight-year-old who reads–ok, glances at–my blog is my daughter, I’m guessing you are somewhere in between that rock and hard place.

Think about it: when was the last time you did something silly, something really out there, without needing 5-10 adult beverages first? No one likes to say, “I failed,” or

Continue reading ‘Want to be more creative? Be a failure!’

Adoptee, writer: how adoption can shape a creative life

I had an epiphany when I answered this question on Yahoo Answers recently: “Did you feel selfish meeting your birth parents?” I was surprised that my answer was chosen as the best, but I was thrilled that the question was posed in the first place. People don’t ask enough questions about adoption; it’s incredulous to me that in this day and age there is still a shroud of mystery around it. Adoption is one of the last taboos, spoken of with the same hushed tone that people used to reserve for cancer. How can we clarify, educate and share the experience if no one asks the big questions?

I’ve been working Continue reading ‘Adoptee, writer: how adoption can shape a creative life’

Avoiding your creative work? 3 tips to get back on track

I’ve dabbled on a book for three years now and still haven’t finished. I finish copywriting projects for clients every day, why can’t I finish this one thing for myself? I think I’m  afraid to fail.

Writing marketing copy (my day job) is impersonal, but writing a book is like opening the door to your soul and letting everyone peek in and take a look around. (I think mine would look a little like Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory, the Gene Wilder version.) What if people hate what they see? What if they love what they see and I can’t follow up with more and I become a one-hit wonder on VH-1? I know, let’s not get ahead of ourselves. One  fear of failure scenario at a time.

I call it creative dissonance. I want to write but I’m afraid of what may happen when I do. Creativity coach Dr Eric Maisel calls it fear of making a mess, and that’s a great analogy. We teach our kids to color inside the lines, don’t spill your milk, pick up your room. Everything is expected to be neat, tidy, orderly. That’s fine for your room or your clothes, but creativity doesn’t work that way. It’s a messy business, creativity. There are papers, paints, oils, brushes, clay, dust and all the other creative tools, but factor in all the emotions involved and you’ve got a big mess.

It’s not writer’s block. Instead, I find distractions to Continue reading ‘Avoiding your creative work? 3 tips to get back on track’

What does an MFA get you? You might be surprised.

When I first announced to family and friends in 1996 that I was going to graduate school to earn a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Creative Writing, reactions were mixed. OK, people thought I was nuts. They said things like, “But isn’t writing something you either know how to do or you don’t?” and “What does creative writing have to do with marketing?” and my personal favorite, “What the hell will that get you?”

I didn’t care. I was going to immerse myself in learning my craft. I wanted to be a better creative writer for my fiction and a better marketing copywriter. I wanted to train like Uma Thurman in “Kill Bill” and be a kick-ass warrior writer who could whip out a shiny pen and people would step back in awe and respect.

Truth? I’m no Uma Thurman. But going to grad school for my MFA was the best six and a half years of my life. I focused exclusively on Continue reading ‘What does an MFA get you? You might be surprised.’

Need a creative spark? Make a change.

Change is in the air. Actually, change is stalking me. It began with a colleague at work denouncing proposed changes to a project with a rant that ended with the declaration: “Change is not good!” A few days later, one of my LinkedIn professional groups came out with this topic: “Why do you think people resist change and what steps would you recommend to reduce this resistance?” On the heels of that, Hubby’ called: “I’ve been reorganized. The good news is, I still have a job.” And as if all that talk about change wasn’t enough, there was this excellent blog post by Fast Company: Make Change Work for You.

OK, universe. I hear you.

Let’s face it, we’ve all seen our share of change these past two years: economic, housing, employment, financial, healthcare. That’s why Fast Company’s post resonated with me, especially the very first line: “One of the chief reasons that so many people are uncomfortable with change is because it happens to them not for them.”

Knowing that change is inevitable, how can you better handle change and make it happen for you rather than to you? Continue reading ‘Need a creative spark? Make a change.’

The upside of insomnia: creative time in disguise

It started at 2am, when I bolted awake, heart racing and pounding like a man on fire inside my chest. I immediately took action, launching into my trusty Insomnia Routine, which consists of a series of mind games I use to try and trick myself into feeling very very sleepy:

2:09am: I am on a beach. Hear the waves. Feel the hot sand. Smell the coconut tanning oil. Hear the sea gulls cawing in lazy circles in blue sky. Caw caw. My running to-do list from work runs across the beach.

2:17am I am submerged in quick sand. Each part of my body floats down, down, down. I am melting into the quick sand. My arms, shoulders, neck, even my hair. That reminds me, my daughter needs a haircut, my client didn’t seem thrilled with my pitch, and I have no idea how to find my way in to that video project, let alone get it done in time.

2:34am I contemplate counting sheep. Dogs. Cats. Cigars. I have to pee. I’m hot. Hubby starts snoring. The dog (who is more like a horse at 70 pounds  and has no business being in my bed) is kicking me in the kidneys.

2:51am: I get up, grab my journal, and head for my office.

This used to go on for two or three hours, so I’ve made progress. I’ve had insomnia off and on since I was a child, so I’ve had time to fine tune. (I once went for a week without sleeping. I was afraid of me that week.) I used to squeeze my eyes shut tight and will myself to sleep, anything to stop watching the clock, counting down the minutes until my alarm went off and my day started, a day that I anticipated to be long, excruciating and exhausting. which made me angry so I squeezed my eyes shut even tighter and clenched my jaws too. SLEEP DAMMIT!

But I’m older now. Not necessarily wiser, but definitely mellower. Have you ever heard of found time? I don’t recall where I first heard of the concept, but it’s the perspective that any unexpected down time, such as waiting in a long line at the grocery store or post office, is extra time you can use however you wish. Warning: too much found time can make you just as angry as not being able to sleep (I am thinking of several long flight delays), but I usually carry a book, notebook, even my laptop wherever I go because you never know when a pocket of found time will pop up. You have to seize it when it pops.

Right now I’m sitting on my couch wrapped in a white blanket and black night and delicious silence with the freedom to write and work for as long as I am awake. No phone, no email, no interruptions. I can actually do and think about one thing at a time, rather than worry about 17 things at once while simultaneously helping one kid with fractions homework (ugh) and helping the other kid make his lunch while simultaneously feeding the dogs, paying bills and putting laundry away while simultaneously ordering a pizza and having a complete mental block when the girl asks for my phone number. (Sorry Mom for making fun of you when you used to say five other names–including the dog’s–before finally spitting out mine back in the day.)

No wonder I can’t sleep.

But multi-tasking challenges aside, I like to look at my insomnia as my pocket of uninterrupted, found reflective time in the middle of the night for writing, journaling, thinking, reading. It’s like a creative trigger, popping up when life is too busy and crazy and the world feels out of control, reminding me–forcing me–to take my little slice of creative time wherever I can get it.

Get Creative: Make found time in your day today for your creative project.

Creativity is a state of mind no matter where you live

the face off: Katy the dog vs. the pot-bellied pig

I remember clearly the summer day my friend and co-worker Becky came back to the office after vacation and announced that she and her husband had bought a 40-acre property in Missouri and they would be moving. In 30 days. Everyone in our small marketing agency—all 12 of us—were understandably shocked.

Becky and her husband lived in Oak Park, an urban suburb of Chicago. She was hip, cool, a former art director at a big Chicago agency who now did freelance graphic design and made pottery. She and her husband had the “perfect life” right here—a beautiful Victorian home that they had rebuilt themselves, a wonderful marriage, a cool life. Becky explained that she and her husband had been planning this for a long time, and that every time they traveled, they kept their eyes open for their next home, preferably in a rural area.

It made sense. Becky had always loved nature; she found her design inspiration in wide-open spaces. And now she was going to fulfill a lifelong dream of owning a large piece of property, where she would work on pottery, garden, do some freelance graphic design, but mostly enjoy the outdoors and a slower pace of life. It seemed like such a romantic, creative thing to do. She was fulfilling her dream for a creative life. Many people wish they could make a life change like this, but how many actually follow through on it? I both envied and admired her. I dreamed of living a life devoted to creative pursuits, a slower version of my hectic life–which became even more hectic as the years went on, jobs changed and little people showed up.

Flash forward 12 years. My husband and I, the kids and both dogs are on vacation in the Ozarks; on our last night in town, we visit Becky, her husband and their 6-year-old daughter on their 40-acre property. It was just as beautiful and slow-paced and quiet as I envisioned it would be, out in the middle of seemingly nowhere.

When we turned off the gravel road into their gravel driveway, Becky and her husband came out of the house looking much the same, but leaner, tougher—life in rural areas makes you more practical, sensible in a way that I could never grasp because I’m…spoiled? In love with urban life? Their beautiful daughter bounded out of the house, hugged my 7-year-old daughter and presented her with a lovely necklace that she had made for her, although they had never met. My daughter was reserved as she always is around strangers, but soon enough, the girls and my 9-year-old son were running around the yard, conspiring to catch a frog and taking it inside to give it a bath in the doll house upstairs–until it hopped away and disappeared somewhere in the house. Becky laughed it off, thankfully.

When the kids finally settled down, the grown-ups had a chance to sit outside in the back yard drinking ice-cold beers in the heat, watching our dogs roam the property free of leashes and fences, barking at the horses and pot-bellied pigs who looked like stubby black-haired lions despite the fact that they feared my 18-pound cockapoo Katy.

We laughed and talked until late that night. Both Becky and her husband talked about the joys of their life here–the open space, being so immersed in nature–as well as the downsides, including how unprepared they were for some of the harsh realities of living in a rural area. I realized that while I had been romanticizing their life, they had been living it, for better and worse.

We got back to our cabin around midnight and tucked in our tired kids, who smelled like grass and trees and frogs and happiness. Husband and I meandered out to the dock to enjoy our last night on the lake. I had always envied Becky’s brave, bold move; when things got tough, I often thought of moving to a simpler, slower pace of life; I thought that if only we lived in a different place, our lives would be different. I would be different. I would be more creative, more happy, more fulfilled. More something.

But at that moment, I knew Becky’s life wasn’t the life for me. The dogs had fun, but both had ticks, as we discovered the next day. And I liked Starbucks and paved roads and being around people–I would shrivel up and die if I had to go days without seeing or talking to people. Husband had never warmed up to the idea of moving and seemed relieved that I was finally letting go of my fantasy.

Waves lapped against the dock. The sky was bursting with stars. All this time, I thought I envied Becky’s life in Missouri. But what I really envied, admired, desired was her commitment to living a creative life, deeply rooted in nature and everything she believed in. She belonged on that land and she walked, talked and smiled like she felt it deep in her heart. I wanted that, too. But for the first time in a long time, I understood that I didn’t need to move to a new state to achieve it. The change could happen within, but only I had the power to control that.

The next day, as we were packing to leave, I was uncharacteristically excited to getting back on the road, making my way back home, wondering if things would look different when I got there.

Get Creative: What beliefs do you have about what it takes to live a creative life, the life that you want? How long have you had those beliefs? What’s true about your beliefs? What’s false? Lastly, what is one small step you can take today to get closer to the creative life you want?

Working for a Big Company: the multi-shaped peg in a square hole

When you go to work for a Big Company, they show you to your cubicle in the cube farm and seal you into an invisible box. It’s different from your cubicle. The box is literally your job description, written by nameless, faceless HR people, which says, you will do X, Y and Z. Which means that if you have skills in A, B and C, zip it, pal. Don’t make things complicated for us. We’ve already put you in your box. NEXT!

Big Companies don’t know what to do with people like me, who have experiences and skills that translate across roles, cubes and boxes. Running two of my own two small businesses for eight years, I had always worn a lot of “hats.” So it was weird to be assigned and confined to just one role…one hat…every day, day in and day out.

In all fairness, it’s confusing for employers; they hired me to be the square peg for the square hole. But it’s frustrating for me, because I know that I can be square, circular and triangular in any given day. It’s like asking an octopus to use only one tentacle. For three years, I sat in my cube at two Big Companies in a row, writing copy all day, 8-10 hours a day. I proofed and edited long, technical papers until my eyes were bloodshot and grainy. I stopped emailing and sharing ideas about new ways of doing things that were either dismissed outright or ignored. I stopped caring. I got depressed. Continue reading ‘Working for a Big Company: the multi-shaped peg in a square hole’

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