Who said drawing circles had to be boring?
This morning I had eight minutes until Emma was to leave to go to another day at lovely, very confident Bakersfield High School.
I pulled a page from a book and started circling words, writing a poem with prose of a spiritual writer named Barbara Marx Hubbard. I had never heard of her until this collaboration.
Eight minutes later I had circled all my words before circling Emma to start her day, this only September 17 of her Junior Year, my only September 17, 2013 ever. I took some photos on campus of Bakersfield High. I shot the choir window commanding S-I-N-G. I shot the water tower that could only be read from the inside unlike Tulare High School’s water tower that shouts to the world “Tulare, We’ve got it!”
I came home. I wrote a bit. I started laundry. In small slices of eight minutes and ten minutes I continued to play with the poem Barbara and I scribed together. I first made an abstract slice of life, country day sort of image and then I added it to one of the pieces of wood I always leave lying around for any creative whim that strikes my fancy.
It is now well on its way to becoming a one-of-a-kind work of art.
My writing timer went off.
Five minutes of writing, all for you, written in the 294 words above.
My intention? To illustrate how to build your creative muscle in small slices, every day, amidst your other activities.
1. Be ready. Have supplies nearby, perhaps squirreled away in drawers or disguised as simple pencil holders.
2. Be willing to see everything as a possible creative subject. Windows, water towers, dumpsters, your ordinary city streetscape when the day is new.
3. Stay focused. Some one tried to get me out of my chair between 6:52 and 7:00, but I was busy building a poem with Barbara’s generously offered words. I did not move.
4. Use a timer to train yourself. I literally set five minutes on my phone clock timer. Use your kitchen timer. If your mind says, “I have too much to do!” set the timer to five and feed your heart with any creative process, even if it is rearranging a drawer artfully. It is your choice to live artfully. It is your choice to live ART Fully.
5. Be grateful for each sliver of an hour you are able to use for your creative process. Don’t expect finish, expect a continuation. It’s sort of like flirting moving into full fledged romance. Take your time, engage, move away and come back later, refreshed, with your make up and a big smile across your face.
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Julie Jordan Scott is a writer, performance poet, Mommy and mixed-media artist. Her word-love themed art will be for sale at First Friday each month in Downtown Bakersfield. Check out the links below to follow her on a bunch of different social media channels, especially if you find the idea of a Word-Love Party bus particularly enticing.
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© 2013