Fear and Grit

I’ve been thinking lately that maybe I'm not meant to be a visual artist, maybe this isn't the path I want to go down anymore, maybe I want to be a writer.

When I think about it though, no matter what path I chose there will be struggle, uncertainty, hardship and pain. If I let that stop me now, I'll just get to the same problem in a different place and it'll be even harder to stick it out because I won't have built up my grit muscles. I need to stick it out and keep going for my sake.The type of life that I want to lead is a meaningful, challenging, fulfilling one where I'm able to keep growing as a person.Maybe I don't "have what it takes" to be an artist, but I'll never know unless I actually try and make an honest go of it. If I really work at it and fail that will suck, but at least I'll have done my best and I won't wonder anymore. And if I try, I might succeed. That's the scary part there. If I succeed I'd need to actually change, and change is scary. I need to rededicate myself to my work, like I said before, I need to lean into the fear and uncertainty.But how? So far I don't have a good answer, but I'm learning that by taking small steps and focusing on my daily actions instead of the bigger picture I'm feeling less anxious, calmer. As long as I do what I need to do, i.e. eat healthy, exercise, and meditate daily I'm better able think and be creative. When I don't do those small things I start to fall apart and second guess myself. I need to figure out how I'm going to support myself in the future, sure, but now I need to focus on the present, not worry so much, and have faith that the bigger picture will take care of itself.I read a book about uncertainty a while ago by Johnathan Fields, it was called “Uncertainty” and I probably should reread it. The book talked about uncertainty and how you can live in the face of it. I remember he talked about how daily rituals help sustain a creative practice. I also want to reread “Art and Fear” by David Bayles and Ted Orland. A friend recently recommended it to me after I posted my last blog post. I had read it when I was in art school, but I can’t remember much from it.Anyway, I need to put less pressure on my art, focus on making progress everyday. I miss making art, I don’t know when it happened, but somewhere I let fear rob me of my art making. I haven’t worked on my art in a few weeks and I miss it. looking back, I think what happened was I showed at gallery night and I didn't sell anything so I got discouraged, I need to remember that the goal of making art isn't to sell it, the goal is to make it. I need to think small: progress, not perfection.Thanks for listening to my ramblings. I wrote this post as a journal entry to myself and I thought that maybe someone else might get something out of it. If you enjoyed this post please feel free to leave a comment below and let me know what you think. Have you encountered similar issues? How have you managed to overcome them?

Previous
Previous

Confession

Next
Next

Thoughts on Doing the Work