If you are a paid member (either through FASO or BoldBrush Circle here on Substack), come see the latest ideas from us and our community in the BoldBrush Circle of Marketing community here: https://marketing.faso.com. We encourage you to join us and become a paid member today here. This is a members-only article series. We are making today’s article available to all subscribers today via email, but please be aware it, and other articles in this series that it links to will be locked in a few days and available for paid subscribers only on our site. Get full access to all resources by becoming a paid subscriber. (If you are a FASO member all these paid posts are available in your control panel at https://marketing.faso.com) Methods of Re-Creation (Part III)We’ve been exploring ideas regarding inspiring your Muse. We normally think of a Muse as a force, or being, or a part of our subconscious that delivers inspiration from the Mysteryto us. But it’s not a one-way flow from Muse to Artist. You are in a relationship with your Muse and your job is to inspire each other. If you find that your creative wellspring has run dry, that you can no longer hear the Muse’s whisper, and that you can no longer bring forth ideas from the Mystery, you may have been neglecting to properly nourish your Muse. This series is exploring ways to to just that - to re-create your Muse and yourself so she will, once again, grace your studio, writing desk, or dance space and start inspiring you. We started our exploration into The Muse a few weeks ago. And, for the next few weeks, I’ll outline ways that I’ve been able to bring my Muse, along with joy back into my life. If you missed any of the previous articles you can catch up by clicking the article name below:
On to today’s post: Noticing
The longer I live, and the more I attempt to create, I believe the following is the essence of being an artist: simply to notice. Notice more. Notice beauty. Notice goodness. Notice truth. Notice what others ignore. And, especially notice what is interesting bout those small moments that most people miss. What do you notice that most people don't? Every single moment presents infinite beauty and infinite fascination. But most people, most of the time, miss it all. So, to be an artist, do this: don't miss it all. Notice it. Cultivate awareness. That is what I am attempting to do in my life: to be aware of the transcendent truth and beauty in all of the universe's small moments, so that I may somehow, via my writing, my work, my music or somehow, in my own life, reflect the beauty of creation back to the universe in a small way. And in that small way, contribute to the beauty of creation. I wrote about this more fully in Noticing, The Meaning of Life. GratitudeMany wiser souls than me have enlightened us about the power of gratitude. The way I finally brought gratitude regularly into my life is my own form of a “gratitude journal.” I keep it simple, and I keep the bar super-low to ensure that I’ll actually do it daily. If the process was too complicated, I would blow it off. What I do is this: I simply try to write about something good every day. It doesn't matter what, specifically, but I notice, and record just one good thing. As an example, here are my gratitude entries for 2023. Most of the entries are only one or two sentences, small enough to fit in a tweet (I originally started the practice on Twitter, so got in the habit if keeping each entry short). It’s not a time consuming practice at all. Surely you can write one simple sentence about a good moment today. It can even be as simple as, “I’m alive.” Sometimes, particular moment stands out. More often, I mentally review each day to uncover at least one (although more than one is fine!) single joyful, inspiring, meaningful, wondrous slice of time where, no matter what other problems or challenges have endarkened my soul, I recall one moment in which the light of creation reached me. If one lived for 30,000 days, one could live, and perhaps even remember 30,000 good, inspiring moments in a lifetime. Is that enough? It seems like possibly it would be. 30,000 joyful moments adds up to a joyful life, doesn’t it? I wrote further about this practice here.
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