Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Top 10 Worst Creativity Tips of All Time (by Demian Farnworth)



You may be wondering where I find folks to guest blog for me. Okay, maybe you're not, but I'm going to tell you anyway. Mostly from reading other blogs, and occasionally from the twitter. (Sorry, Facebook. It's not you, it's me.) I've actually got a fairly sizable list of folks I'm planning to ask. Sadly, that list is in my head, and I keep losing it. Anyway, I've been so pleased with all the guest posts so far, and my analytics tell me you have been, too. Damien was one of my twitter finds. I never know how people find me and follow me on twitter, but as long as it's a real person, I'll typically follow them back. I'm glad I did so with Damien, because he sent me a really great post.



Demian Farnworth is Managing Editor for an international humanitarian aid organization and blogger for Fallen & Flawed.

Top 10 Worst Creativity Tips of All Time

What do you get when you cross a cranky writer with an opium-induced dream? Nothing to gawk at, normally.

But English poet Samuel Coleridge defied the odds and cranked out an unforgettably creepy poem called "Kubla Khan".

The only problem is nobody can really tell us what the poem is about. Coleridge couldn't even do it. And unfortunately generations of poets have followed in Coleridge's footsteps ushering in an attitude that says true creativity occurs when you alter your mind.

But that's a terrible idea. And there are nine more really bad ideas on how to jolt your creativity. Let's take a look at them.

1. Wait for the Muse.
Want to make my skin crawl? Want to watch me clench my fists? Then tell me you can't write until the Muse moves you. In fact, if you're a professional, I might hit you. I'll repent afterwards, but I'll definitely swing. Professionals write whether they feel like it or not.

2. Get drunk.
Or stoned. Or huff glue. You'll write some of the most ridiculous stories, paint the most dysfunctional pictures while intoxicated. Funny thing is, they're masterpieces while you're high. But sober people will avoid you. However, get them drunk, and you're a genius. See no. 10.

3. Eat meat.
Long ago some Chinese mystic-artist always ate meat before he fell asleep so he could have great dreams. [Give me a break on the ambiguity. I read it somewhere. Just don't know where.] I don't recommend this tactic either...because what happens if your dreams dry up? They will, artist boy.

4. Toy with Twitter.
Despite what social media pundits want you to believe--Twitter is not a inspiration factory. It's a chaotic cocktail party that will rob you of time. Doesn't mean you can't hang out there. I do it myself. Just don't depend on it for creative ideas. You'll get sucked away and totally forget what you were doing.

5. Smoke cigarettes.
No one's flat-out preached that smoking cigarettes inspires. But stroll by any bistro and all the artists and poets and writers will be puffing away. Cigarettes kill, people. Then again, if you don't care, you are guilty of number 7.

6. Fall in love.
If you depend on the unpredictable, violent emotions of new love **cough, cough, LUST, cough** then you might rock out a killer freshman album. Girls will stalk you. Men will envy you. Mothers will hate you. That is until your sophomore album rolls out. Then they'll see you for the one-hit wonder you are.

7. Becoming a sadist.
Blame it on the Romantic poets: They were ones who thought a true artist suffered. So what about the thousands of years of creative output before then? And frankly, what the Romantic poets and Co. have created are marginal footnotes to enduring masterpieces.

8. Don't create.
The Salinger principle of creativity states "you can't create it without killing it." You're guilty of this if you fear that perfect artistic idea will get ruined if you commit it to paper or canvas. Get over yourself and create.

9. Specialize.
I'm guilty of this one. The idea that you will create great work if you do nothing but one thing. This is problematic because some of the best ideas come to us from fields that are far different than ours. Become the explorer. Not the homebody.

10. Thinking you are a genius.
Or a "serious" writer. [Now, where did that come from? See no. 7.] Personally guilty in this category. Picasso said that it took him a life time to learn how to draw like a child. There's liberty in simplicity like that. And great art.

Listen: This list was generated after twenty years of failing hard in my own attempts at creative writing and a simultaneous ten years of working as a professional writer and editor. I've seen these tips and attitudes come from my own mouth and the mouths of other writers. Do any of them ring a bell? Would you add any? And if you're guilty, don't worry. So am I.

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To read more from Damien, visit him at his blog Fallen & Flawed, follow him on the twitter @DFarnworth, or visit his Facebook page:Demian Farnworth.

12 comments:

katdish said...

Thanks for the great post, Damian.

I somehow turned off the comments on this post, but I've fixed them. Feel free to talk amongst yourselves...

bman said...

Those are helpful! Although... I'm going to keep eating meat, regardless of it's creative guiles.

Heather said...

What a great post. I am guilty of a few myself. Though, I must say, Poetry Jams on Twitter (www.tweetspeakpoetry.com/blog) have given me a WORLD in inspiration. But, only when used correctly.

Demian Farnworth said...

Kathy, thank you for the opportunity! It was a lot of fun...and I'm so glad our paths crossed.

Bman: I still eat meat, too. Just not right before I go to bed. ;-)

M Rubies: Small doses of Twitter can occasionally unhinge great ideas. Like they say, moderation.

Duane Scott said...

LOVE THIS!! Hahaha. Very entertaining writer, Katdish! I'm going to pop by his blog.

jasonS said...

Very nice. I'm with bman... Inspiration or not, meat is on the menu. :)

You've mentioned a lot of my pet peeves too. Great to vent, huh?

Monica Sharman said...

Bummer---I really like that Korean "bool go gi" which is nothin' but BEEF.
I guess I'd rather be uncreative than give that up.
Now off to prepare that hot roast beef sandwich...

Marilyn Yocum said...

Good heavens, I may be guilty of #8.

Enjoyed this post!

Jeffrey Holton said...

Ok, this is awesome. Really. :)

Helen said...

I liked this post. Yes, I'm guilty of a few of these, and that is not even including the fact that I am a carnivore. I know. I should be an omnivore, at least. I try...

Shark Bait said...

I think it was Neil Gaimen who once said "I don't know where my ideas come from, but I know where they go to - my desk. And if I'm not sitting writing there when they arrive, they leave."

Or as David Seven says "I don't wait for my muse to arrive on fairy wings, I go out there and club the biatch and drag her back to my workspace."

Anonymous said...

Sharkbait,

I don't know about the Neil Gaimen quote, but that second one sure sounds like me, doesn't it?