Author: veronicabishop (page 17 of 21)

freedom & frustration

How is it that I can be faced with all the freedom in the world, and respond with nothing but fear and frustration?

I am coming to realize more and more that I lack motivation out of a sense of guilt and/or duty. I always feel that I ought to be doing something other than my own work, and that I must have express permission to do what I would like to do.

I have the whole day to myself, and have been encouraged to do art all day without feeling any guilt whatsoever about not doing anything else (like making things that others have requested, or cleaning the house). So I’m up at dawn, having set up my art supplies the night before. I sit at my art desk with everything accessible, dog curled up at my feet, Radio Paradise on low.

But…eeesh. There’s a blank canvas staring at me. That’s daunting. Paint. I have an idea of what I’d like to do, but I still don’t know if I’m quite ready for that just yet. Maybe I’ll warm up a bit by doodling with markers in my sketchbook. This is proving to be not so fruitful either.

Suddenly I find myself crying. Then crying becomes sobbing. Deep, hard sobs.

What has happened? What’s wrong with me? What is this deep-seated frustration and why can I not simply draw some colorful poppies? I don’t know the specifics, but I think the freedom is too much for me to handle. I don’t know where to begin. I don’t know in what medium I feel comfortable. Just sitting down to “create something” is too tall of an order. Too lofty. Too vague. I have my choice of any medium, but I’m daunted by all of them. I’m not even sure that it’s a fear of failure or imperfection that stunts the creative flow.

I fear that my medium is here on the page, which is why I’m writing until the urge to cry subsides. But facing this fear and telling myself that I’m perfectly capable of creating whatever I want to create only makes me more emotional.

I don’t think it’s the fear of NOT being able to do something that makes me tearful. It’s accepting positive thoughts about myself and my abilities that always prove unbearably touching. I can handle criticism like a champ, but compliments and beauty undo me. In wanting to participate in everything creative and beautiful, I find myself completely frozen. I desperately want to accept permission from myself as readily as from others. I wish I knew what I ought to do. And I feel silly that these are the questions floating around in the cocktail of doubt that is my subconscious. I guess I just wish I were a stronger person with a stronger sense of direction.

My solution for today will be to take refuge in some good music & coffee, cuddle with the pup, and write until I have something worthy to commit to paper on my beautiful Remington. Surely this is the stuff of inspiration.

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it’s all happening…

a fun place to kick off your holiday shopping while enjoying a delicious chili-drenched baked potato in a handmade ceramic bowl to take home. i’ll be vending there (look for me directly across from where they’re serving up the food), and so will my dear, talented friend Lisa Ruiz.

Image

 

 

then, i’ll be switching gears a little bit…vending for the first time at the santa ana patchwork festival, which sounds like it will be a blast!

 

 

postcards

 

whew! check back for a preview of coming attractions. until then, i’ll be crocheting my butt off. cheers!

 

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true self image

I know I’ve written about this before, but I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how my name relates to my work. True image. I’ve heard that the name originates from the Catholic tradition that as Christ carried his cross to his crucifixion, a woman wiped the blood from his face and created a perfect image of His face on the cloth. She was then called Veronica, meaning “true image of Christ.”

I find the connection fascinating not only in that I happen to make images, but also in that there’s an undeniable link between creating and self-image. Self awareness and self worth directly influence my creative drive. I’m not talking about that self-esteem crap that they’re pumping into all the kids in American schools these days. I’m talking about being in tune with and realistic about who I am as a human being created in the image of God.

When I go through stages of self-loathing, it is impossible for me to create out of that state of mind. What I have to do to regain my creative drive is realize that self-loathing is not an accurate point of view. I’m not seeing myself correctly. I need to see myself from the standpoint of humility and gratitude, to realize that I am a flawed human being, but that I am a work in progress and very fortunate to exist at all, much less have such a privileged existence.

So when my self-image lines up and I can approach my work with gratitude, I can also have realistic expectations of myself as an artist and of the work itself. I should strive for excellence, but not expect myself to get anything right in the first shot. I’m not God. But all I do should reflect Him through me.  I am learning to like what I see in the mirror because it is a work in progress as I strive for a healthy body rather than a perfect figure. So also, instead of wishing it was something else, I can learn to love my work because it is a step in my evolution as an artist.

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withdrawal & reward

Right. So I’ve fallen off the writing wagon. Fallen off the creativity wagon altogether, really…save for work stuff and one rogue day of making earrings out of Sculpey. (Earrings out of Sculpey? Seriously, I wonder who the hell I am sometimes.)

Anyway. I haven’t been doing much of my own work lately. I’ve been CRAZY productive with pseudo-creative projects at work, which is in its own way very rewarding, but not in the way that doing my own work is rewarding. When I create things with my hands for the mere sake of creating, it makes me feel whole, human, and connected in a way that nothing else does. It doesn’t have to be profound or even have an end–either in the sense of having purpose or in the sense of ever being finished. Even the feel of the keys beneath my fingers as I now write drivel is slightly euphoric.

I constantly wonder why it is that I encounter Resistance to my own work every day, when I ought to be compelled toward it as a drug compels a chemical dependent. It gives me a high, I feel tremendously depressed and unlike myself when I’m away from it. So why do I ignore my withdrawal symptoms? I’m even rewarded beyond what I thought possible when I do even the bare minimum. Quite some time ago I did some very small paintings on a whim. Just simple designs that I did just because (gasp!) I liked them. I hadn’t intended to sell them, but put them on Etsy anyway. Would you believe that they’ve actually garnered a respectable amount of interest? I’ve sold one and been asked to do four more.

Lest you think I’m tooting my own horn here, I’m not. My point is this: when creating purely for the pleasure of creating, that is it’s own reward. And sometimes the Muse gives me success beyond that, sort of as a bonus. The joy of creating lies in abandoning success–commercial or otherwise–as a motive. If I’m not whole without doing the thing I feel I was born to do, what more incentive could I possibly need? What more compelling call to action?

I recently restored my computer to its factory settings because it was being, for lack of a more precise descriptor, a total knobhead. In the process, I lost ALL of my writing. Every script, every short story, every college essay. Gone. I’m sure I have hard copies of them in binders somewhere. I hope.

I have to insert, dear patient reader, that at this point in writing this blog post, I somehow temporarily lost this blog post. My hand grazed the track pad and I accidentally navigated to another page. Having begun in “quick post,” I was cussing at my computer again for fear that it didn’t auto save. It did, but how quickly I forget my own lessons. Ironic, ain’t it? Back to our regularly scheduled program…

But if I never find my collection of writings, I’m starting to be okay with that. Because it’s a fresh start. Because I don’t have anything to fall back on or a past voice against which to compare myself. Because I can be better than I ever was. Because I can experience the joy of writing just for the hell of it with no expectations, knowing that I’m creating something that is my own. And that is its own reward. Anything else I may gain from it is just a bonus.

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