Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Multi-Tasker's Delight!

Greetings!

Are you a multi-tasker? Here's a buffet of practices and healing modalities that double as jump-starts for your creativity and intuition!

Hydrotherapy
Let's start with a very easy and accessible one that you do already every time you take a shower! Your mind wanders and leaves space for the ideas to come through. A bath is great, too, and a whirlpool is even better! What a great invitation for your right brain to kick into gear!

Journaling
Journaling expert Kathleen Adams calls her journal her "79-cent therapist," because it's always ready to listen without judgement. Julia Cameron, best-selling author of The Artist's Way, has an exercise in that book called "Blasting Through Blocks" that I use a lot in my journaling.

The guided journal I've written, The Whispering Heart, contains fifty quotes and accompanying questions to get your thoughts moving. It's available through me for $10 US. Please email me for more information at scleaver@dejazzd.com. Tax and shipping will depend on where you live.
Or you can ask for a free 5-page sample!

Meditation
Meditation is also great for getting out of your own way to let the ideas and intuitions come through. Meditating with a group is even more powerful. If you have trouble with sitting meditation, try walking meditation. The rhythm of the movement is a plus.

Reiki
Intuitive pops are common during Reiki treatments for both the giver and the receiver. Reiki practitioners generally see this get stronger over time in themselves. Level One practitioners can give Reiki to others and to themselves.

If you'd like to know more about Reiki, you can send me your questions anytime at scleaver@dejazzd.com. I've been at the Master-Teacher Level of Reiki for about a year, and I've noticed some interesting ways that is has affected my outlook (and therefore my output.)

Massage
Again, this is a way to open the door and let the "still, small voice" be heard. I particularly love Shiatsu massage, which works by stimulating the accupressure points along the body's meridians.

However, as long as the method you choose is gentle enough to be relaxing, I believe it can double as a welcome mat for creative ideas and intuition.

Dream Study
You can do this on your own, or better yet, with a therapist who is experienced in working with dreams. Dreams are loaded with creative and intuitive messages! A good therapist will know what questions to ask to help you make connections between your waking life and your dream life. Keep a notebook and pen by your bed so the dreams don't slip away. The symbols and metaphors will amaze you!

Labyrinth Walks
This ancient form of meditation takes you on a meandering path to the center of the Labyrinth, where you can sit and meditate for a while and then meander back out. It produces a similar quieting of the mind as I have discussed above, and again, it invites your creativity and intuition to come out of hiding.

There are indoor Labyrinths, outdoor Labyrinths, and even finger Labyrinths that I've seen carried in catalogs. Give it a try!

Life Coaching
Coaches are trained to ask expansive questions, to be thoughtful listeners, and to be effective brainstorming partners. We also encourage you and hold you accountable during that bumpy stretch between your "ah-ha!" and your finished product.

Please contact me for a free trial phone session at scleaver@dejazzd.com!

Gestalt Therapy
This is an interesting and revealing ride, and your imagination is in the driver's seat! The therapist will guide you as you act out dialogues between one part of yourself and another or between you and another person, object, animal, dream figure or creative project! And because you are doing this without forethought, you get to the heart of the issue quickly. Your left brain doesn't have time to interfer or object!

Please post your comments about your experiences with these practices!

Thanks,
Susan

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Connect the Dots to Holistic Creativity

Hi All!

Our creativity is intregrated with almost everything we do. What habits do you need to adjust to structure the areas below into a firm foundation for your creativity?

Your Body
This one sounds so obvious, but in the past, I've been guilty of overlooking it. I was living in my head all the time while my body was screaming for restoration of my health and energy. As you can guess, all that pushing and striving didn't do a thing for my creativity or my well-being!

Your Mind
Provide your mind with lots of fertile input about your topic and about life in general. Keep your mind clear and relaxed, and choose the right level of challenge for you that will put you into the flow state, where concentration becomes effortless and you lose track of time.

Your Spirit
When I started studying the creative process about 20 years ago, I was surprised to find that it was linked to spirituality! Julia Cameron covers this beautifully in The Artist's Way; I highly recommend it. Develop your intuition (there are lots of great books available on this). Give meditation and solitude a try.

Perhaps the trickiest part is the paradox of passive volition. This is where you clarify what it is you want to create, and maybe play around with it a bit. Then you back off, and keep an open, accepting attitude, listening for the pieces as they come together. If you're a fan of the movie/book/audiobook "The Secret," by Rhonda Byrne, (www.thesecret.tv) then you are familiar with this already.

Your Emotions
The best advice here is simple but not always easy: feel your emotions, acknowledge and process them, and keep them moving on through. Don't bog yourself down with stuck emotions.
Journaling can help a lot here. I've written a guided journal called "The Whispering Heart," available through me for $10 US. Please email me at scleaver@dejazzd.com. Tax and shipping will depend on where you live. You can also request a 5-page free sample from the book!

Your Environment
See last week's post on creativity and your environment. Your work environment doesn't have to be opulent, but it does need to be nurturing and supportive.

Your Community
In The Artist's Way, Julia Cameron says that we need "believing mirrors." These are the people who will hold faith in your work until you are ready to hold it for yourself. Barbara Sher, a career counselor and author, says, "Isolation is the dream-killer."

My friend Mary Beth and I have weekly "Dig-Ins" where we call each other and state what we are going to work on for the next hour. Then we hang up and get to work, followed by a check-in call at the end to see what we've accomplished. Instant accountability and focus! After our first hour, Mary Beth said, "I got more done on this project in one hour than I have in the past month!" It sounds simple, but it works. Email me at scleaver@dejazzd.com if you'd like to try it. I don't charge for this; it helps me, too!

All my best,
Susan

P.S. A special note to those who feel they have put their creativity aside in order to raise kids: raising children is one of the most creative things you can do! You wear many creative hats as a parent: entertainer, problem-solver, role model, soul soother, cheerleader and facilitator for their talents, and much more. Enjoy your on-the-job training!

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Design Your Environment to Boost Your Creativity

Greetings,

Create a supportive space where you and your creativity can thrive! Clutter clamors at us, draining our energy, fracturing our attention, and causing energy blocks that leave us feeling stuck. So out with the old to make room for the new! Nature will fill the vacuum with great ideas and inspiration.

See decluttering and establishing order in your workplace or home as a form of self-care. (See my last post for more about self-care.) When I see it as self-care, it seems like much less of a chore.

I also work on the clutter in short bursts to keep my resistance from coming up. Be compassionate with yourself. Focus on the solution rather than wasting energy beating yourself up about the mess. I teach what I need to learn, and I'm still working on these things myself. It's a very common issue; you're not alone if you have clutter or organizational issues!

Develop a system of organization that fits your personal style. Many books are available on this topic, including at least one for creative types and at least one for those with ADD.

The order you create will be soothing to the eyes and the soul. Color and harmony in your environment are very important, too. Ideally your environment should get lots of sun and have windows that open so you can air the space out often, Feng Shui experts tell us.

Sound is another thing to consider in your environment. Music affects the energy in a room and your own energy. If you're feeling droopy and down, start with a piece of music that closely matches your mood. Then gradually bring your mood up by playing successively more lively pieces of music.

Also consider how the space will cater to your kinesthetic sensibilities. Consider the ergonomics of the furnishings and the textures of the fabrics in your environment. If you're the sort of person who thinks better you have something to fiddle with, consider keeping some small puzzles or a squishy stress-relief ball handy.

On an old TV show called "Thirty-Something," two of the main characters worked at an ad agency, and they had to be creative at their jobs. They put a small basketball net right in their office and played a little one-on-one to loosen up their thinking. (See my last post for more on the value of play.)

Taking these steps to improve the energy of your environment will make you a worthy steward for more creative ideas to come to fruition under your care!

Please add any victories or blunders you have to report around this topic from which the rest of us can learn. If you're finding more blunder than victories, I'd love to coach you on this topic! Email me at scleaver@dejazzd.com to set up a complimentary trial phone session.

Cheers,
Susan

P.S. to Betsy: Thanks for the thought-provoking comment for my 2/20/07 post on reframing success. I agree; it's very grounding to stay in touch with our mission and values. I also love what you said about being more inner-directed in spite if all the advice that is coming from the outside. Just like a store full of shoes, the suggestions of others are not always going to fit!
Love,
Susan

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Rx for Creative Blocks

1. Let go of striving and resistance. Accept this part of the creative process with as much grace, faith, and patience as you can. The harder you push against the block, the more entrenched it will become. Einstein said, "A problem cannot be solved by the same level of mind that created it." O.K., so how do we get to another level?

2. Press "pause." Julia Cameron, author of the modern classic, "The Artist's Way," asks, "Have you learned the art of doing nothing so 'something' can emerge?" Solitude and meditation can support this period of incubation. Let go of how and when the solution will come. Just let your mind play with the pieces of the puzzle "off-line." If meditation isn't for you, try journaling or any repetitive activity that allows your mind to wander.

3.Press "Play." Martin Buber said, "Play is the exaltation of the possible." While your subconscious mind is playing, consciously play also! Find a healthy balance between solitude and time with others. Brainstorming is a great form of mind play, whether done alone or with friends, but "Mental expansion is found in the inspiration we give to each other," (author unknown). Allow yourself to explore, experiment, make mistakes, and have fun!

4. Try some cross-training. Include in your play some time to dabble in other forms of creativity. They will keep the creative juices flowing while your subconscious mind works on the block. Experiment with different structures and tools. This can change your perspective and relieve the stress around the original project, which you can later return to feeling refreshed.

5. Get out in nature. Walking in nature is even better, because of its repetitive, meditative qualities. Try doing your brainstorming out in nature, too. You will feel a different kind of energy supporting you and carrying you along.

6. Take small steps. When you return to your project, do so gently. Set a timer for 15 minutes and play around with any new ideas you garnered from taking the steps above. If nothing comes together, back off and try again later. Once something clicks for you, you'll be off and running!

7. Self-care is the common theme in all of the steps above. Julia Cameron asks, "Do you remember that your body and your body of work are connected?" I wish I could give you (and myself) a quick fix for creative blocks, but this is another one of those situations where it serves us better to go with the flow. See my post from 2/12/07 called "Patience Is Power!"

Please add your comments about how these or other block-busters work for you!

Thanks,
Susan

P.S. I used some of these steps while writing this post!