Tips on maintaining and nurturing inspiration.
Hotsauce84
8,450 Posts
So lately I've been seeing or doing things that make my heart race with inspiration. I'm literally on a high right at that moment, but then just like that, the excitement fades and my motivation is gone.
Anybody have tips on how to harness, bottle and/or maintain that level of inspiration so that I can create once I get to a time and place where I can?
I know it's an odd question and it's probably not worded the best way, but I think you guys get the gist of what I'm saying.
Anybody have tips on how to harness, bottle and/or maintain that level of inspiration so that I can create once I get to a time and place where I can?
I know it's an odd question and it's probably not worded the best way, but I think you guys get the gist of what I'm saying.
Comments
I kind of know what you mean. The only method I have is to jump on that shit as quickly as possible and ride that shit as long as possible, like catching that big wave. They may not come that often so you have to get on that with the quickness. Sometimes I have to try to manufacture the inspiration and that is not so easy but occasionally gets me somewhere.
Mid-life crisis?
I have a third-of-life crisis every week.
Keep buying stuff. Whoever says $ can't buy you happiness is a broke fool.
Inspiration is valuable, the initial investment is more important.
Now, is a good time to make some trades, and invest some time in them. I'm thinking about selling my computer and buying a mobile DJ unit because the one I use currently sucks a lot, and is kinda high maintenance.
it sounds simple, but i always just go for a walk. preferably to a part of town i am unfamilier with, i take a camera and get lost.
maybe try another creative endeavor that is not your primary one, EG, snap pics if you are a producer, make beats if you are a writer kind of thing.
the key is to be in unfamilier surroundings out of your comfort zone with no pressure to create, you will find it comes back easier than you think.
if you are looking for a longterm thing, i can recommend working with old folks or kids, even if it is only a couple hours a week (or month) their perspectives are different to yours and keep you on your toes.
and notes, make lots of them during your crative spells, just train of thought 'keep the hand moving' type scibblings, these will serve as sources of inspiration during your dry spells, there are nuggets in those pages of scrawlings.
And I would second nzshadow's comments about keeping notes, and would add that it's a great way to do an important thing, which is to divorce inspiration from reliance on special tools and circumstances. A canvas and some paint? That's hard. A yoga mat and a solid hour of quiet? That's hard. A pen and some paper? Easy.
Cosign on the walks, too.
Going to exhibition and museums is always useful and getting drunk with people you share the same kind of humour with. Whenever I spend time with the buddies I know since schooldays, I come back home with a truckload full of fresh ideas.
This may sound corny, but my kids a constant source of inspiration. As they learn about the world I relive/rediscover things that I had forgotten about years ago.
Buying things is a band-aid fix, but it does work. Just picked this up:
I now have lots to learn about Fords.
This is my shit right here...
www.evernote.com
Basically, you have to pick one inspiration and see it through. This will mean letting other inspirations fall by the wayside, but that beats the hell out of letting all of them fall by the wayside.
hey this is an awesome tip, im really glad you mentioned this.
i still use one of those for musical ideas.
Some of those old tricks to get your left brain working are good if you are having a creative block. Try drawing with a continuous line without looking at the page, or drawing/writing with your non dominant hand. I have actually ended up using refined versions of these doodlings as a start point for illustrations or logo designs.
I also like plating music at a low volume from another room than i'm in. It's barely perseptable but seems to help me keep my brain flowing and focused when i'm having trouble keeping to task. Likewise, playing some free jazz crazyness quite loud tends to push my brain into directions that I normally wouldn't go.
This is also great working music for me, but everyone is different : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Far_Away_Trains_Passing_By
sounds like a good idea. I don't have a cellphone so every once in a while you can catch me running to a payphone to phone home and sing like a crazy person just to record bits of verses, choruses etc on the answerphone that have just occurred to me the minute I walk out of the studio (of course). Which is why frequent walks are also a good recommendation...you think you're done for the day, just hit the streets.
It works.
And for inspiration for writers (of any kind) I cannot recommend THIS book highly enough.
I have been stranded in the middle of a creative wasteland, completly and utterly devoid of a single useable idea, only to be saved within minutes by this book.