Author: veronicabishop (page 18 of 21)

creating routine

Okay. It’s time to get serious about this business of being a creative person. I haven’t been giving my craft the respect it deserves. If I were my boss in this business (which I am, why can I not let myself think that?) I ought to fire myself. I haven’t been showing up to work, and on the rare occasions that I do show up at all, I phone it in or fiddle around with odds and ends. This is no way to do business or hone a craft. It’s high time I gave it some solid, dedicated time if this means as much to me as I want it to mean.

I have to constantly remind myself that making crappy art isn’t half as wasteful as letting all my art supplies take up space, sitting there forever unused. How much more wasteful that I have all these ideas rattling around in my head and not doing anything with them. So what if they turn out bad? Of course nothing good will come of anything if I just let it sit in my brain.

So, however insignificant the steps may be, I resolve to do something every day to actualize the visions in my head. Even if it’s the tiniest sketch in my journal, there will be daily creative output in my life.

Since it doesn’t matter what I do so much that I do, I intend to carry around my heretofore unused red sketch journal. I’ve had it for years, but it’s useless because I’m afraid to mess it up. Yet it only serves its purpose if I use it, for better or worse. If I don’t mess up, I don’t get better. So if I decide that my goal is to fill it up by using at least a page a day, I can aim for routine instead of perfection. That, friends, takes a LOT of pressure off. I’ve been hearing a lot lately about creating routines in order to eliminate as many decisions from your day as possible to free up your mind for more important things (like knowing that you’ll eat a pear every day at lunch so that’s one less thing you have to think about). I think having this as part of my daily routine will mentally take the pressure off of my need to create. Deciding what I’m going to create won’t drain me if it doesn’t really matter, since it’s just something I’ll be doing every day. There’s no fear of messing up because it’s just a journal. It’s just like morning pages–I’ll doodle every day just to be in the habit of it, with the peripheral benefit of catharsis. It’s sitting down to your work that’s the whole of the matter.

I know that I can do good work if I just show up to the job. So here I am, reporting for duty, prepared to show up every day, on time, checking my ego at the door, with a can-do attitude and willingness to learn.

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in pursuit of purpose

I don’t know how many times I’ve asked myself the question, “What would you do if you could do anything in the world?” Usually the first thing that springs to mind is that if money were no object, I would probably be a perpetual student and traveler, possibly working with dogs on the side (I melt over dogs the way normal people melt over babies. They make me incredibly happy.)

I love fonts/typography, but I’m not especially fond of the idea of graphic design. Computers aren’t really my friend, at it’s not easy to get too emotionally invested in the shapes of letters and numbers.
I like working with people, but only on certain levels and in small, intimate doses. Phones are my enemy. I’m often crippled by social anxiety.

I’m made to create. I know that much. If I couldn’t make something with my hands, I’d be very frustrated and unhappy. But that is so vague. What is it I’m meant to be creating? What art media are available to me? What do I know how to do, or what am I interested in doing? I love my day job; at work I do a small amount of illustrative type work with markers, but that doesn’t necessarily feel like my skill, much less my calling.

I keep trying to paint, but I find that I don’t especially like it. Painting would be fun if it were at the ready all the time. It’s the set-up and cleanup that keep me from starting. I prefer something that I can work on a little at a time, whenever the mood hits, and not feel obligated to put in a lot in one sitting with lots of cleanup. Pastels are pretty good for this, but I feel a little out of my league there…and they, too, are a bit messy.

Drawing is more of a hobby that I like to revisit casually, but I’m daunted by that, too. I can never find a subject that captures my attention enough for me to commit it to a finished work. Trying to put myself in the category of “artist” scares me, frustrates me, and incapacitates me. I always want to ‘do art,’ thinking it will be cathartic, but I inevitably end up sitting at my art desk, confounded by too much freedom. I never know what it is my hands desire to make. It’s kind of like the expression, “My eyes were bigger than my stomach.” I usually feel that my hands are more anxious to create than my mind is.

I enjoy films very much. I would definitely consider film a part of my life. I went to film school and majored in screenwriting. I would someday love to make documentaries, but networking and getting a crew together is neither my forte nor something I’d even care to attempt. If it was just myself with a camera and a subject, that film is getting made. And that film will stay in a closet somewhere, because I’m rather afraid of talking to people. And filmmaking without networking is simply home movies. And that’s fine. I can live with that. Screenwriting and documentary filmmaking didn’t exactly shoot to the forefront of my mind when I started asking myself what I wanted to devote the rest of my life to.

In no particular order, my favorite classes in college were my documentary class, European Cinema, Writing the Scene, Adaptation, Creative Writing, and of course the Torrey Program in which we read Western civilization’s great books. So, writing and reading literature stand out as the things that really make me light up like a firefly. I spend hours listening to podcasts of short stories and mini-documentaries (the latter of which I think I love partly because of how poetically it’s put together—there’s a beautiful rhythm to it). I love watching documentaries on almost any subject, especially if they are done in an artful yet simple way. In bookstores I’m sometimes drawn to the art section, but I think that’s mostly because that’s what I feel like I should be interested in reading about. And I am, sometimes. But I just simply can’t get enough literature. There are more books on my “to read” list than books I’ve read in my life (and I’ve read a LOT of books). I could easily spend my proverbial ten thousand hours reading, but that isn’t actively honing a craft.

Lately I’ve been wondering what I wouldn’t mind spending ten thousand hours perfecting. Drawing and painting didn’t make the cut. I do, however, tend to think artistically in the sense of rhythm of language and beauty of surroundings and situations. Not in a way that I care to replicate on canvas, but rather in words (though that doesn’t usually occur to me in the moment that I’m pondering things). I adore language and words and the way things sound. I love the feel and sound of the keys beneath my fingers, even if nothing terribly profound is appearing on the screen above. And so I think I would gladly write for at least an hour a day for the rest of my life if I allowed myself to think I had anything worth writing.

And with that, I think the last hour of probing my mind has brought me to this conclusion: I truly and desperately want to be a writer. I feel a kindredness with writers (and I feel okay with occasionally taking license and making up words like kindredness). I am emotionally rooted in the world of writers and literature. It resonates with me more than any other interest of mine. Writing allows me to externalize what I value in a way that I cannot in any other medium. Only in story am I able to illuminate the characteristics I admire in my fellow man, and dramatize on a page the scenarios I would either love to see happen or would never dare to enact in the real world. My characters can say and do everything I would ever imagine saying or doing. It is the ultimate catharsis, and it is possible that there is nothing more satisfying to me than creating a world and characters that others can jump into and (one hopes) love. I find that even after writing this bit of nonsense, all feelings of anger and depression that I carried with me earlier in the day have simply faded away and left in their place a relaxed contentedness. I don’t presume to think I could ever be a great writer, but surely my emotional response to the idea of writing is an indication that I ought to try.

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square peg

when things are on the up and up in my life, eventually depression rears its ugly head. succeeding in something, veronica? it seems to say. then begin self-destruction sequence! the more i pour into something i love, the harder the self-loathing mechanism kicks in shortly after. i’m not sure why this happens. maybe that’s why Little Women always hits so close to home.  i sympathize deeply with jo march, trying to find my niche in this world.

today i finally sat down to paint, and i love doing it. but something about painting only holds my interest for maybe an hour at a time before i want to pack it up and do something different. i want to write, but staring at a blank page leads me to puttering around on diy websites, which ultimately makes me want to create a bunch of other useless things.

one problem is that in all the things i really love to do i’ve been self-taught. and i’m a lousy teacher because i have a restless student. i can’t pin myself down. i often feel that if only i could narrow my focus, i could hone a specific talent. but all creatives know that choosing what medium to focus on is like being asked to kill your babies.

figuring out just what it is i should be doing may be a very long journey. right now i am a tightrope walker, teetering between jo’s restless frustration and the hope that marmie is right.

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shelter from the storm

I don’t know what it is about this time of year that makes beauty and pain in all their forms cut straight to the center of my heart. It’s an awful lot like love sickness, a tender appreciation for everything and everyone, which is heartbreaking in its loveliness. Every unkind word would be a knife under the rib if it weren’t tempered by the stunning shadow cast by a tree at dusk.

Maybe it’s our soul’s defense against the phenomenon I like to think of as a “winter shit storm.” It has been my experience in adulthood that the most heartbreaking moments of our lives tend to happen around Christmastime. Maybe our hearts are extra warm so that we can handle hardships with grace, so we can experience pain and loss and feel it more truly. Maybe instead of being angry at what’s hurting your loved ones, it makes you love your loved ones more. Now I don’t really buy into the whole “holiday spirit” thing–don’t get me wrong, I love Christmas, but for me that joy shouldn’t be seasonal. Well, whatever you call it, I’m grateful for a little extra love–both within ourselves and as grace from others–to get us through those moments that might otherwise break us.

A couple years ago on Thanksgiving day my grandfather checked himself into a hospital with double pneumonia, then died the day after Christmas. He lost my grandmother two years prior around Christmastime–lung cancer complicated by double pneumonia. Last Thanksgiving my mother-in-law began her three-month hospital stay during which she was (successfully, thank God) treated for colon cancer. This year my step-mom lost her brother to cancer. Before that, she herself beat cervical cancer.

But the thing about relatively easy-to-treat cervical cancer is that if it comes back, it comes back with a vengeance. Hers did. And it spread to her lungs and brain, sending her, too, to the hospital with double pneumonia. She was about to surrender to it until she was told she may only have three months to live, maybe eleven with continued radiation and chemo. “That’s too short,” she said. Now she’s at home, under the care of a respice nurse (hospice care, but with advanced directives) and my loving dad. While I hate that this is happening to my dear stepmother, the thing that really gets me is what it must be doing to my dad to see first his mother, then his father, and now his wife in the same hospital bed in his living room, being taken from him. I’m angry at the cancer for bringing pain to my family over and over again.

I’m angry because I’m powerless. I can pray fervently. I can try my damnedest to be a better daughter. I can hope that science does whatever it can. But I can’t do anything to make the pain stop. This is why (while it’s still it’s own kind of pain) I’m very happy to experience the kind of beauty that brings me to tears. It reminds me not to despair, and to be strong enough to share hope with those whose pain is from an entirely other source. It reminds me that life is too short not to love with every fiber of my being.

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