I also worry that I now come up with more ideas than I can personally action, and I don’t have the resources to delegate them. It’s a bit of a frustration
Thanks for the great insight, Brian.
Ian Moss
11
Hi Ian,
I recommend to watch / listen to Elizabeth Gilbert talking about creativity. If allowing yourself to be inspired fills you with a sense of responsibility to bring each the ideas to life, this perhaps will bring you some solace:
The fragment which I would like to highlight to you is transcribed below:
[T]he best contemporary example that I have of how to do that is the musician Tom Waits, who I got to interview several years ago on a magazine assignment. And we were talking about this, and you know, Tom, for most of his life, he was pretty much the embodiment of the tormented contemporary modern artist, trying to control and manage and dominate these sort of uncontrollable creative impulses that were totally internalized.
But then he got older, he got calmer, and one day he was driving down the freeway in Los Angeles, and this is when it all changed for him. And he’s speeding along, and all of a sudden he hears this little fragment of melody, that comes into his head as inspiration often comes, elusive and tantalizing, and he wants it, it’s gorgeous, and he longs for it, but he has no way to get it. He doesn’t have a piece of paper, or a pencil, or a tape recorder.
So he starts to feel all of that old anxiety start to rise in him like, “I’m going to lose this thing, and I’ll be be haunted by this song forever. I’m not good enough, and I can’t do it.” And instead of panicking, he just stopped. He just stopped that whole mental process and he did something completely novel. He just looked up at the sky, and he said, “Excuse me, can you not see that I’m driving?”
“Do I look like I can write down a song right now? If you really want to exist, come back at a more opportune moment when I can take care of you. Otherwise, go bother somebody else today. Go bother Leonard Cohen.”
This is a subject that the late Sir Terry Pratchett had touched on as well and captured it with wonderful wit in Sourcery:
By another stroke of bad luck, the sight of a herd of wild horses galloping through a field of wild hyacinths would have led a struggling composer to write the famous Flying God Suite, bringing succor and balm to the souls of millions, had he not been at home in bed with shingles. The inspiration thereby fell to a nearby frog, who was not in much of a position to make a startling contributing to the field of tone poetry.
So if I have any suggestions to give it would be this:
Some ideas are not ours to bring to life. To some inspired ideas we’re just a nearby frog and we should let them go bother someone else. For example Leonard Cohen.
Best of luck,
JJ