BEHIND THE BLOG

As writer, teacher, jewelry-maker and everyday woman, I'm fascinated by the ways that clarity and clutter shape creative lives. To me, the question of how much stuff we have is far less important than how much time, freedom and focus we can bring to our creative efforts. Sure, sometimes clutter manifests tangibly, as supplies, possessions, or mementos. But just as often it appears in less physical (but no less powerful) forms: as distractions, drains, obligations, expectations, judgments, and fears that leave us no time or energy to make art or even dream dreams. My first "DeClutter Your Creativity" classes were inspired by my own personal struggle to find the balance of abundance and emptiness needed to fuel my work...and to find it again, and again, and again as my life and work evolve. This blog is another way to dialogue on the subject: written with curiosity, compassion and (sometimes) comedy from the often befuddling place where creativity and clutter meet.

Showing posts with label past. Show all posts
Showing posts with label past. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

BETWEEN PAST AND FUTURE, II: The question of distance

Once you've done the tagging task described in my earlier post, Between Past and Future/I, you might want to try this one as well. It works in the same room uses the same tags you put in place earlier.

This time, you're not focused on the question of past vs. future. Instead, you'll be looking at how far away in past or future each item is. Is the room or studio filled with things that representing meaning very far from today, or are most of its contents relatively closely linked to how you live, work and/or create today?

To explore this, go around the room and take off the tags on every item that represents a past six months or less before today or a future six months or less after today. In other words, you are removing the post-it tags from all items that definitely have been or will be used within six months of today. The word "definitely" is important here. Don't fudge.

The binder holding a manuscript you began and abandoned two years ago, books from college or graduate school, shells from a long-ago vacation, a stack of empty frames you've kept in case they might fit artworks as yet unpainted, a box of pastels you don't really like to use but spent good money for way back when, and ephemera you might use for collages of a type you're not making now would all fit into that category. Leave their post-its on.

Books you've referred to within the past couple of months, manuscripts of recent work, supplies for media you're currently working with, mementos received very recently, and stuff that is placed in some "way station" in the room but will soon be moving out...take the tags off all of these.

As you did after the first exercise, take a moment to step back once you've finished.

How have the numbers of post-its changed? A little, or a lot? If the room looks much the same, you probably tend to assign memories or usefulness to things for a very long time. If there are noticeably fewer sticky notes in view, you're likely a person who lets go of such meanings faster.

Has one color disappeared more than the other? My own personal tendency is to keep many more things I received in the the distant past than things I might need in the distant future. In contrast, my friend Denise is much more prone to keeping art supplies and materials that she might use someday. Neither tendency is better or worse than the other; it's just helpful to know which one leads to the most clutter for you.

Though I'm focusing on creative space here, this exercise is helping in things like closets too, helping give you an easy visual read on just how much you are hostaging the present against the distant past or future.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

BETWEEN PAST AND FUTURE, I: How much room does the present have?

Here's an interesting way to explore the whys and wherefores of a room or creative space that feels uncomfortably cluttered.

You'll need nothing more than two different-colored post-it pads of the super-sticky variety....a half-hour or so of uninterrupted time....

Choose one of your two post-it colors to represent things you are saving because they had meaning in the past (yesterday, or any day before that). These might be mementos, collectibles, finished artworks, or supplies for projects you are no longer working on.

The other color then represents things you are keeping in case you might need or want them in the future (tomorrow, or any day after that).

Move around the room or studio as quickly as possible, tagging each item you pass with either one or both colors.

Stop yourself when you notice that you are assigning judgments, feeling shame, trying to make decisions, or starting to move items around. None of those reactions are necessary right now; tell yourself you can always think about/do them later if you wish to. Just place as many post-its as you possibly can, as quickly as you possibly can.

When you've tagged most of the items in the room, step back and look around you, trying to keep an open heart and an open mind.

Does one color predominate over the other? That is, do you seem more prone to keeping mementos from the past, or hedges against the future?

How much room does the present seem to have?

Leave the notes in place and take a brief break. Give yourself some time to 'live with' whatever you've discovered.