Showing posts with label creative live. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creative live. Show all posts

Saturday, September 17, 2016

30 Days Of Genius Blog: Kelly Starrett


There has never been a time when humans were more focused on their bodies. Muscles, tissues, the brain, recovery, etc. We are breaking it down and focusing on it like never before. Just like everything else, understanding the basics is the foundation to a healthy body. Small knowledge leads to large knowledge the same way small problems lead to big problems. Understand the micro of your body, to get it producing at the macro.

I have taken his interview on 30 Days of Genius with Chase Jarvis, extracted the information, and used it to answer common questions by readers just like you, who are looking to take their lives to the next level, or at least a different level than the one they are on.

Please enjoy.

What Does My Body Have To Do With “Big C” Creativity?

One word: EVERYTHING

It’s all connected.

Your body tells your brain what to think.

Smile, you will feel happier.

Slouch in your seat all day at work. When do you slouch normally? When you are sad, or depressed, or feeling vulnerable. When you sit like that all day at work, you are telling your brain you are sad, which means your brain starts thinking sad. You breathe differently, and your body works differently. 
Sad people store fat more, and are unhealthier. And that all can start with your posture! Think about that!

It’s all reciprocal. Your body and mind are a team. They talk to each other.

Standing tells your brain that you need to focus, pay attention, because things going on are important.

How do you work all day? Are you sitting or standing?

Do you have a tough time getting through the day? Might want to try standing.

Is Sitting Really That Bad?

I’ll put it this way, it’s more dangerous than bears.

That sounds funny, but it’s true, at least by the numbers.

People lose sight of the fact that we are physical machines. Our bodies are a work of art. We just finished the Olympics in Rio. All of those movements, from swimming to gymnastics, long distance running to weightlifting, all of those are using our full range of motion. Basically speaking, our bodies are supposed to do those things! Think about that as you knees creak getting up from the couch, and you can’t get your arms above your head to get the cookies off the top shelf. (by the way, pain is not normal. Don’t trick yourself in to thinking it is your age. It is because you are not treating your body right).

This all comes from a sedentary lifestyle. We need to move more. In fact, when we are not moving, we are not being who we are supposed to be.

Sitting is the new smoking.

We need to intentionally move more, and intentionally take care of this “machine” that we have.

From sleep to stress, posture to tissue work, we need to take care of ourselves. Our bodies are an amazing gift that gives back to us the better we take care of it.

How Do I Take Better Care Of My Body?

Move more. What else can you do? Take the stairs? Walk to the store? When can you work in more movement?

Here is a fun little fact, non-exercise movement actually burns more calories than exercise. Those little step counting gadgets don’t seem so lame now do they?

Find 10 things you can do to be more active each day than you are right now.

You will feel better and be healthier the more you move. Your lymphatic system, a major defense in your immune system, needs the muscles to move in order to pump blood through them. They are not a part of the cardiovascular system. Ever notice that your more active friends don’t get as sick as much? That’s why!

Make your environment work for you. Don’t make it easy. Throw away the chair at your desk. If there is not chair, you have to stand!

A lot of this is more about undoing a lot of bad habits than gaining good ones. You conditioned yourself to be sedentary, you need to undo that.

Eat healthy.

Sleep well. I don’t mean take Ambien, Benadryl, alcohol, or smoking weed to go to bed. I mean real, naturally good sleep. Cold room, blackout curtains, no phones in the room, only clocks with red lights, limiting caffeine after noon, using eye masks and earplugs. That kind of sleep.

Notice where you are stressed and fix it. Stress is like carrying around a 50lb backpack. You may be able to handle it, but it is still weighing you down.

The Benefits To Health

You can focus more, pay better attention, your productivity will go up, you will feel better which means you will feel better, you will perform better, and best of all, it’s free.

Just remember that little problems lead to big problems. Feet, ankles, knees, hips, and back are all connected. Issues in any of those areas can lead to issues in all of those areas.

Use foam rollers, volleyballs, or anything else you can find. Move it around your body. Roll around on it. Wherever it hurts, that’s where you need work. Pain to compression is not normal. Give yourself little massages every day, loosen your body up feel better.

Quotes

“If we don’t move, we aren’t being who were are supposed to be.”

“Practice should become the standard.”

“Intentionally move more.”

Kelly Starrett Links


Chase Jarvis Links


Joey Links

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

30 Days Of Genius Blog: Brene Brown


This interview has been the most difficult to write. There is so much tangible information I had a difficult time deciding what to leave out. Here is the link to the podcast. I pieced out the information for entrepreneurs specifically, but she has so much wisdom for life in general, you should do yourself a favor and check it out.

I have taken her interview on 30 Days of Genius with Chase Jarvis, extracted the information, and used it to answer common questions by readers just like you, who are looking to take their lives to the next level, or at least a different level than the one there are on.

Please enjoy.

How Do I Win?

The most important aspect of winning is making sure that you are not losing. Sabotaging is the easiest way to not only lose, but to feel like a loser.

You need to learn how to sift through your emotions, let go of the thoughts and feelings that are 
holding you back, and push through.

The sooner you push, the sooner you break through, the sooner you win.

Storytelling

This is not the kind of storytelling where you sit around in a circle and no matter what happens, everyone lives happily ever after. This is a conspiracy theory type of storytelling, and you are the main character. The good thing is, you are also the author of this story, and you are the one that chooses the ending.

There are two things that happen when we storytell: we get emotional, and we fill in information that we do not have. After that, we react to the situation where we filled in information as if it were fact, and it’s not.

See how that can work against you?

What was that look? What did they mean by that? Are they being sarcastic? They hate me. I’m not good enough. I suck.

Sound familiar?

It should. We all do it, until we learn not to.

Rising Strong

Remember this: You WILL fail.

Expecting something more positive?

I bet you did.

But I would rather be honest and realistic, because that is what is going to help you. If you are truly putting yourself out there, truly engaging in work and life, you will fail. If you are not failing, you are not trying hard enough.

I want you to have an honest and realistic perspective. You can get that by asking yourself a few tough questions: 1. What am I feeling? 2. What is the story I am telling myself? 3. What facts do I ACTUALLY have? 4. What information do I still need?

Turn directly to your storytelling self, listen to what you have to say, acknowledge the feelings, then look at the situation and the information you REALLY have.

After you ask yourself those questions, ask the people you are dealing with questions. Ask for clarification, maybe even go so far as to let them know you are telling yourself a story based on your interaction and you want clarification.

Show them you have the balls to ask tough questions.

They will have more respect for you because you are showing that you have respect for yourself. You will not allow yourself to storytell, you would rather know the truth. Bravo to you!

Dealing With Discomfort

One thing I found consistently with people that are able to recover faster and rise stronger are the ones that are able to endure discomfort the most.

Will it be uncomfortable clarifying a point with your boss? Probably.

When you don’t get the outcome you want at a business meeting, will it be uncomfortable to go back and possibly get beat up digging deeper in to where you went wrong? Absolutely.

But after those tough discussions, after the discomfort, you will have a crystal clear view of the situation and how to handle it. You will learn about them, you will learn about yourself, and you will be better for it.

Keep reminding yourself that it will be ok. You will get through it. How do I know? Because when you keep pushing through the darkness you eventually get to the light, every time. Think back on other difficult times in your life, other difficult situations. How did you feel at the beginning? Awful, I am sure. Well guess what? You are still here. And you will be after the next one. It will be hard, but you keep pushing. That’s how you win.

Quotes

“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.” Theodore Roosevelt

“Unused creativity. Creativity that has been disowned, is not benign. It’s painful, it metastasizes and turns in to dangerous things.”

“When you own the story, you get to write the ending.”

“Your ability to rise should never be predicated on other people.”

Brene Brown Links


Chase Jarvis Links


Joey Links

Sunday, August 7, 2016

30 Days Of Genius Blog: Stefan Sagmeister


If you clicked the link to this blog you are probably a creative, and you are familiar with Sagmeister. Either that, or you are curious about who this person is and what advice he can offer. If it’s the latter, you are in for a treat. I admit that I did not know who this was before the interview, but he absolutely blew my mind with insights in to being successful and developing your creative abilities throughout a career.

I have taken his interview on 30 Days of Genius with Chase Jarvis, extracted the information, and used it to answer common questions by readers just like you, who are looking to take their lives to the next level, or at least a different level than the one they are on.

Please enjoy.

How Do I Stand Out?

In order to truly stand out you need to have your own style, and that takes time. Personal style is something that sounds intimidating at the beginning, something you are striving for from day one, but it is not something you can force. As much as we push for it, it is something that will slowly develop over time. The more you create, work, re-think, re-do, and experiment, the sooner your style will develop. I truly believe it is easier to develop your style today than it ever has before. With so many outlets to display your work, you are able to receive enormous amounts of feedback in a very short period of time. Being critiqued, seeing your work through others’ eyes, and having the ability to create consistently will help you zero in on your style. You will develop what makes you art different from everyone else’s, but you won’t get that without creating. The more the better.

Do not allow artistic “rules” to box you in. There are techniques and strategies that have been used for decades that are irrational and even dumb, yet no one wants to question them. If you want to avoid blending in avoid following the rules. Create for you, create for your audience, but don’t create for the rules. The heart of an artist is to be different, stand out in society, but so many times they fall in line when it comes to the thing they should be most creative about. They may not sit in a cubicle, work from 9–5, and wear a tie, but there are many artists that will confine their creations just as much as if they had an office job. It’s a shame.

I can see it in their faces. They want to be different, they know it is the right thing to do, and they just won’t allow themselves to do it. I received so much support for the things that I did differently, like taking year-long sabbaticals, because even if they didn’t allow themselves to be different, they wanted to see it done, and they appreciated it.

How Do I Maximize My Creativity?

There is no clear path for anything in life. Similar destinations, varying paths. Even for becoming a professional artists. Some do school, some don’t. Some bounce around jobs, some stay in one. You must find what works best for you, then make sure you do it.

I maximize my creativity by exposing myself to as much as possible. Different cities, jobs, techniques, perspectives, everything. For a while I was even trying to come up with something completely new and different with every project, but that is impossible. The artists I see that push that as their focus are the ones that are either taking decades-old techniques and passing them off as new, or are stealing from their contemporaries. You can’t come up with something brand new every single time, but do not take that statement as an excuse to stop growing.

There are two things that I do to help stretch my creativity regularly.

1. I think about the project from the point of view that has nothing to do with the project itself. Through the eyes of someone completely disconnected, or through an object that is completely disconnected. What does a shoe look like through a Coke bottle? How would a bee see a book cover? It really helps get out of creative funks and start looking for the “different.”

2. Taking time off, but with a plan. I make a list of things I want to explore, rank them in order of interest, then set up a schedule to learn, dissect, and create. It is vital for me to set up a schedule. I tried it without a schedule at first and I found myself being pulled in any and every direction the wind blew. Clients would call me up and I was working again! I had to stop it completely, and the schedule saved me. I use it until I am working on so many new projects I don’t need it any more. If I get stuck on one project, I have a handful of other ones I can jump to, so I never get frustrated. What usually happens is working on one project will trigger something for the project was stuck on. After the sabbatical, I can approach my old work and clients with fresh eyes, fresh ideas, and new strategies. It has been amazing for my career and my creativity.

Figure out the tricks that allow you to create the best, then use them. Develop a pattern and a habit that gives you the greatest creative production, then repeat it.

Misconceptions

Artists feel like we are so different, when really, we are not. Our outlet may be different, the type of job, but we are all very similar. Things that make us happy, sad, and scared, are things that make most people feel those same emotions. Embrace your feelings, recognize them as something that is not unique, and then create art around those feelings, knowing that they are for you AND someone else. 

There are people out there that are feeling the same way you are, let them see.

Recognize that money will not make you as happy as creating quality work. The years I have been most financially successful, I have not felt as good as the years I felt we created the best work.

Quotes

“If we can, we design something that helps somebody or delights somebody”

“All of the stuff I looked good in was boring. All the stuff I looked shitty in was interesting.”

“Think about the project from the point of view that has nothing to do with the project itself.”

Stefen Sagmeister Links

Website — this is one of the coolest websites I have ever seen!

Chase Jarvis Links


Joey Links