Hey everyone đ. I'm John. Welcome to Creators' Corner: a place where I share advice on creative experiments & expanding your skillset. Here's the previous edition of the newsletter if you missed it.
âIch bin nicht mehr so kreativ wie frĂźherâ, one of my classmates said with near-perfect pronunciation in our German class last week.
The teacher (or Lehrerin) wanted to know whether we had any creative talents, like singing or dancing or painting.Â
My classmate, a mechanical engineer and voracious reader, said that she had some when she was younger, but she doesnât consider herself to be that creative anymore. The job spec has forced her to become more technical.Â
This made me chuckle.Â
Not in a mean way. No, more because it struck a chord. It reminded me of my former self. Iâve also said âIâm not that creativeâ many times before.Â
My background is in numbers, maths and stats. I never saw myself as an ideas guy. I thought creative endeavours were best left to the artists and people doing it for a living.Â
I stayed in my lane and left being creative to the pros.
Redefining creativity
We all start out creative.Â
Like my classmate, and so many folks I speak to lament, when we are children we are naturally creative and unashamed to act on it. Creativity feels like (and really is) play when we are younger. We paint, we sketch, we build things.
But we somehow lose touch with the inner creator when we grow up.
It's not that the creativity is no longer there, it just gets buried under an 'adult' image of building a career and the seriousness surrounding that.Â
We tell ourselves limiting stories. We prefer to say weâre not artistic or weâre not musical or weâre not full of ideas.Â
As
, the author of Fight Club and Choke, says:âSomehow people have been sold on the idea that only professionals can entertain them, that only professionals can sing or tell jokes. And people are cut out of this creativity loop, and creativity is being limited to these large, centralized voices.âÂ
But this is a shame.Â
Equating âreal artâ with âbeing creativeâ, holds ânon-realâ artists (normal people like you and me) hostage. It divides us into groups, those who are allowed to be creative and those who arenât.
I was tired of subscribing to this belief.
Reconnecting with creativity
In my free time, I was taking lots of notes, making diary entries, jotting down what I found interesting in the books and articles I read, and, mostly, admiring people who were actually writing and sharing their ideas with the world. People breaking free from convention. Voices like Paul Graham, Steven Pressfield and Kyla Scanlon.
This admiration for creators pointed to, I believe, some deep desire to create things myself, a part of me calling out for attention. And maybe even the ability to create things myself.
âIn my experience, when we project a quality or virtue onto another human being, we ourselves almost always already possess that quality, but we're afraid to embrace (and to live) that truth.â â Steven Pressfield
After years of quietening this inner voice, I finally listened to the signal and started sharing my private notes (notes I was taking anyway) online.Â
Summaries of podcasts I was listening to, apps I was using, tips I was applying in sport and life.Â
My thinking was simple â by open-sourcing my notes, other people could learn from them instead of simply hoarding them for myself.
Some of these notes even became essays (with visuals - a big goal of mine) later on.Â
I was *finally* creating.Â
At a deeper level, I think, this change was triggered by a frustration with the limited offering my technical career was giving me. I had learned everything there, and become good at my job, but I was somehow still not fulfilled.Â
I could see the next 30-40 years of my life flash before my eyes. More meetings, more pricing models, maybe managing some people, getting promoted and then eventually retiring and playing lots of golf. Is this everything I had been working towards? Surely there had to be more.
I was willing to take a chance.Â
Through sharing my thoughts, developing my writing habits, and picking up some visualisation skills along the way, I stepped off the default path and found something more fulfilling. Something more rewarding.Â
Last week I published my 100th post on my website. A collection of (extended) notes, essays and visuals. A portfolio of work.
I moved out of the shadows of others. I stepped into the arena instead of watching from the sidelines. And I havenât looked back since.
Combining existing skills with creative skills
Make no mistake, technical skills are valuable and hard to come by.
I give corporate a hard time, but to be honest, I learned a lot in my 9-5 job. Core skills like Excel, coding and building pricing models as well as the political and softer skills that come from managing people.
When you add creative skills like writing, distribution and storytelling to the mix, things get interesting.
Combining your technical skills with creative elements is where the magic happens.
Not only will you find more fulfilment (as I have), you might even become better at your job. Youâll find new ways to solve old problems and youâll find better ways to convey your ideas.
Itâs encouraging to see more people heeding this message. Ordinary working people who are breaking from convention and making things, despite not fitting the traditional artist mold.
Like two former colleagues of mine, an actuary and a data scientist, who started their own stage production (with music and everything) about the wonders of the universe, which has been sold out for two seasons in a row. Or a friend of mine, a data engineer, who started a blog on productivity â
. And, yet another former colleague, also a data scientist, getting into short films (link still in the works).This warms my heart.
It shows being creative isnât the exclusive domain of artists.
There is space for us technical types, non-real artists like you, me and my classmate, to also create.
Permission to create
If you need to hear this - you are creative. You have permission to create.
In fact, you should.
Sure, maybe we won't become virtuosos like Picasso or Tolstoy, but the admiration for other artists points to a creative force inside of us waiting to be unleashed.
Everyone has a story to share.
We just need to permit ourselves to take the leap.
My Favourites
đŹ Quote: Our highest calling is to do creative work we enjoy and to be proud of it at the end of the day.
âI hate to go to bed at night feeling I have done nothing useful in the day. It is the same feeling as if you had gone to bed without brushing your teeth.â â Winston Churchill
đ Book. Fallen Leaves: Last Words on Life, Love, War, and God by Will Durant. A joy to read. Where Durantâs other publications are about the opinions and lives of others (historical figures & philosophers mostly), this book, which was published posthumously, is about his own views on politics, religion, sex, war, childhood, old age⌠everything really.
Itâs scary to know that the manuscript was almost lost. Before he passed away in 1981, Durant mentioned that he was working on one last project. He was afraid he was âlosing his pepâ. Nothing was ever heard of the project again. Until one day, his granddaughter came across a few old boxes while she was moving⌠and there it was â the manuscript Durant had been working on. Itâs wonderful that this work didnât go lost and that we are lucky enough to read it. Like witnessing the last few leaves fall from a giant oak
âď¸ Essay. Lost Children by
. This is a beautiful account of her son's growth and changes over the years (how his younger selves have disappeared), built around a story of how he actually disappeared for 30 minutes in a cinema. My girlfriend and I experienced something similar a few months ago when our dog went missing for 8 hours. The longest day of my life."Being a parent is about missing many people alwaysâ so many versions of our children disappear, will disappear. Not in department stores, as I feared as a child. But in growing, in living. There is that desire of an impossible reunion with who they were, too."
đ¸ Photo of the week: first time doing laps this summer. Canât think of many better spots to go for a swim.
Until next time - happy creating!
â John
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âď¸ Write of Passage workshops. If youâre interested in joining the next cohort of Write of Passage, the online writing school that launched my writing career, be on the lookout for the following free workshops (affiliate links):
Wednesday, September 6th at 2pm ET - Grow Your Audience with the Cultural Tutor.
Tuesday, September 12th 7pm ET - How to Start Writing Online.
Tuesday, September 21st at 12pm ET - Write of Passage Test Drive.
đ If youâd like to support my journey, the best ways are to:
Grab one of my digital products. Procreate for Writers is a 60-minute video that helps you create visuals that grab your readersâ attention. Run Your Newsletter Like a Restaurant is a Notion dashboard that enables you to capture your best ideas & the best content you consume.
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Man, that quote by Alissa is spot on. There are so many times I think back to things my daughter would do when she was younger and wish I could experience it one more time.
LOVE the russian doll illustration. So creative and compelling!!