All tag results for ‘practically’

a pcq-qcp: bedside essentials

June 27th, 2007

[-quick tip, practice-]

PCQ - QCP / a quick creative practice
A Quick Creative Practice
~simple habits can have profound impacts~
spacerthin.gif

Keep a tablet and a pen or pencil on your bedside table at all times!

DREAMS
If you wake with a dream still in reach, jot it down immediately. If you want to fall back to sleep, don’t worry about transcribing the full dream. If you write the most important words and images you’re likely to remember the connecting links later.

SOLUTIONS
Those transitional times just before falling asleep or waking—especially from a nap—are rich times for problem-solving and inspirational ideas. Having paper and pencil nearby will allow you to capture these gems that might otherwise disappear from your mind as the world crowds in.

SKETCHES
The tablet isn’t just for words. If you’re like me, you’ll sometimes *see* images that need to be painted or drawn. Make quick sketches before they too are lost to time.

spacerthin.gif
spacer1a.gif
spacerthin.gif

Being Practically Creative

May 3rd, 2007

[-essay-]

spacerthin.gif

by Nancy S.M. Waldman

editorsdesk.jpg
I have a close friend who has compared herself unfavorably to me in terms of creativity ever since we were girls. According to her, I’m creative and she isn’t.

But I never bought it.

She’s a elementary school teacher and I’ve seen the way she tackles a challenging situation in her classroom. She goes at that challenge with a buoyancy, inspiration and mental ingenuity that can only be described as creative.

Human beings are, by nature, creative. But there’s an odd dichotomy in evidence that people who are inclined toward the arts are labelled “creative” and those who aren’t are said—often by themselves—to be “non-creative.” This harmful labelling ignores other kinds of creativity.

My friend’s is a practical kind of creativity.

On the other hand, there are throngs of people who are clearly creative in the realm of the arts who have trouble getting started, staying on track, producing, finishing, keeping their confidence up. And, having been one of these people from time-to-time in my life, I can tell you that it’s not a situation that can easily be ignored. This kind of non-productive creativity is frustrating and painful.

I think of it as being impractically creative.

The Practically Creative Quarter is a zine for both ends of this extreme, as well as for those who are in the middle. Here, we explore ways in which the practical and the creative within each of us can learn to co-exist in peace and flourish in whichever direction we need to go.

pcqlink3blue.gif

If you are a compulsive type who can be creative but is overly focussed on the end product, delve into our process articles and see if you can’t experience the mind-healing, freeing flow of simply being involved in a creative experience that has no intended product.

If you are one of those people who starts many things but finishes nothing, take in some of our more practical tips and graphic reminders to discipline yourself to focus a little more on the outcome.

If you are like my friend (used to be) but you desperately want more hands-on kinds of creativity in your life, try some of our tutorials. Being creative is about taking the steps to learn how, to allow yourself to be a beginner, and not to get discouraged if one kind of creativity doesn’t turn out to be ‘your thing.’

And everyone needs an occasional dose of inspiration, creative cross-pollination or a light-hearted reminder about not expecting perfection.

the practically creative quarter graphic link

Being Practically Creative isn’t about what you create. It’s about harnessing a creativity that works for you. Whether your kind of creativity needs more focus on practical discipline -or- on having a freer flow of creativity, you are capable of unifying these two aspects of yourself. The more fully we can integrate the practical and the creative parts within us, the less likely we are to be that other kind of practically (meaning: all but, nearly, almost) creative!

Make peace between the practical and the creative within yourself and enjoy the experience as well as the results.

spacerthin.gif

sig2.gif

spacerthin.gif
bluedef1.gif
spacerthin.gif

Mark my Words

May 3rd, 2007

[-graphic reminder-]

spacerthin.gif
make your mark
spacerthin.gif
spacerthin.gif

Other posts about marks:
Making your Mark - essay about self-promotion
Marks have Meaning - art tutorial

spacerthin.gif

All such Graphic Reminders are the playful fault of Nancy S.M. Waldman
© 2007 all rights reserved

spacerthin.gif
spacer1a.gif
spacerthin.gif

BEN’S ANAGRAMS / MANAGES BRANS

April 3rd, 2007

[-crackles!-]

from contributor, Ben Shepard

Can you figure out what phrase inspired these superlative anagrams?*

- pry a catalectic liver Read the rest of this entry »