Archive for the ‘self-editing’ Category

If you would be great


09 Nov

The longer I work at whatever this thing is that I’m working at, the more I am learning that it is truly in the work that something enduring comes into existence. There are no shortage of resources, gurus, and “experts” out there to tell you what you supposedly don’t know, but my experience tells me that your own heart and mind knows most if not all of what it needs to know.

A favorite blog I like to frequent is one called Zen Habits. A recent post spoke to this idea – that by doing the work, your work can only get better. The difference then becomes learning how to make the most of the work, i.e. working smarter, not harder. Or maybe both smarter and harder. Here is a great excerpt:

“There’s only one way to become good at something:

1. First, you must learn it by reading or listening to others who know how to do it, but most especially by doing.
2. Then do some more. At this point, you’ll start to understand it, but you’ll suck. This stage could take months.
3. Do some more. After a couple of years, you’ll get good at it.
4. Do some more. If you learn from mistakes, and aren’t afraid to make mistakes in the first place, you’ll go from good to great.

It takes anywhere from 6-10 years to get great at something, depending on how often and how much you do it. Some estimate that it takes 10,000 hours to master something, but I think it varies from person to person and depends on the skill and other factors.”

Phineas & Ferb & Positation


09 Oct

phineas-and-ferb
The answer is Friday. As posted earlier this week, sometimes creativity is simply the process of looking at familiar things in new ways. Hence Mr. Phineas and Mr. Ferb. These two are all about making uber-cool stuff, seemingly out of nowhere. Sure, it’s just a cartoon. But for me, the real life takeaway is the fact that it’s all about the fun, and self-editing just takes away from your creative energy. Even more better (yes, I know that sounds wrong – but it’s Friday, remember?) they are all about positation. That’s a real word. I know ’cause I learned it in college – Bill Ball was a theater instructor in SF for many years, and positation was his way of saying “yes!” to every idea, without all the self-editing we use on ourselves. Here’s what a couple of his students had to say:
“Bill had this word, ‘positation.’ He would say, ‘Never say no.’ Of course, this was good for him because he didn’t like people saying no to him. But it was also a wonderful way to work on a play, to be open to any suggestion. Then, through doing what you might not want to do, wouldn’t have thought to do, you have another thought, and his mind would feed on whatever idea you’d come up with, and you’d end up exactly where you really wanted to be. It’s sort of a lesson for life, too, though of course there are times one should say no.” — Kitty Winn

“The point is that if you entertain everybody’s idea, eventually you get to the right one. But unless you say yes all along the way, you might not get to that great idea. … Bill had some genius in him. He was a very nutty person. He was a man who did not play by the rules. … But he had a power to lead and he was willing to stand in front of everybody and, if he had to make a fool of himself, he’d make a fool of himself in order to get done what he wanted to do.” — Annette Bening, former ACT student and company member

So next time you find yourself self-editing, think of Phineas and Ferb and instead say “yes!” and keep working on that backyard roller coaster. BTW, the platypus’s name is Perry.

Be Mused

every fire needs a spark