The following piece, from medium.com, written by Kevin Ashton is relevant to me as I work on creative projects. Time management is the hardest thing for me, right now, as I do my creative work. I have lot's of good ideas and work I want to do. Being a mom, working part-time out of the house and all the projects on the homestead take up most the time.
I struggle with saying no or yes to social commitments, community events, volunteering for this, that or the other thing. What is a creative person to do with big dreams and a few projects she'd like to accomplish on her plate?
I can just say....
I struggle with saying no or yes to social commitments, community events, volunteering for this, that or the other thing. What is a creative person to do with big dreams and a few projects she'd like to accomplish on her plate?
I can just say....
Creative People Say No
A
Hungarian psychology professor once wrote to famous creators asking
them to be interviewed for a book he was writing. One of the most
interesting things about his project was how many people said “no.”
Management
writer Peter Drucker: “One of the secrets of productivity (in which I
believe whereas I do not believe in creativity) is to have a VERY BIG
waste paper basket to take care of ALL invitations such as yours —
productivity in my experience consists of NOT doing anything that helps
the work of other people but to spend all one’s time on the work the
Good Lord has fitted one to do, and to do well.”
Secretary
to novelist Saul Bellow: “Mr Bellow informed me that he remains
creative in the second half of life, at least in part, because he does
not allow himself to be a part of other people’s ‘studies.’”
Photographer Richard Avedon: “Sorry — too little time left.”
Secretary
to composer George Ligeti: “He is creative and, because of this,
totally overworked. Therefore, the very reason you wish to study his
creative process is also the reason why he (unfortunately) does not have
time to help you in this study. He would also like to add that he
cannot answer your letter personally because he is trying desperately to
finish a Violin Concerto which will be premiered in the Fall.”
The
professor contacted 275 creative people. A third of them said “no.”
Their reason was lack of time. A third said nothing. We can assume their
reason for not even saying “no” was also lack of time and possibly lack
of a secretary.
Time
is the raw material of creation. Wipe away the magic and myth of
creating and all that remains is work: the work of becoming expert
through study and practice, the work of finding solutions to problems
and problems with those solutions, the work of trial and error, the work
of thinking and perfecting, the work of creating. Creating
consumes. It is all day, every day. It knows neither weekends nor
vacations. It is not when we feel like it. It is habit, compulsion,
obsession, vocation. The common thread that links creators is how they
spend their time. No matter what you read, no matter what they claim,
nearly all creators spend nearly all their time on the work of creation.
There are few overnight successes and many up-all-night successes.
Saying
“no” has more creative power than ideas, insights and talent combined.
No guards time, the thread from which we weave our creations. The math
of time is simple: you have less than you think and need more than you
know. We are not taught to say “no.” We are taught not to say
“no.” “No” is rude. “No” is a rebuff, a rebuttal, a minor act of verbal
violence. “No” is for drugs and strangers with candy.
Creators
do not ask how much time something takes but how much creation it
costs. This interview, this letter, this trip to the movies, this dinner
with friends, this party, this last day of summer. How much less will I
create unless I say “no?” A sketch? A stanza? A paragraph? An
experiment? Twenty lines of code? The answer is always the same: “yes”
makes less. We do not have enough time as it is. There are groceries to
buy, gas tanks to fill, families to love and day jobs to do.
People
who create know this. They know the world is all strangers with candy.
They know how to say “no” and they know how to suffer the consequences.
Charles Dickens, rejecting an invitation from a friend:
“‘It
is only half an hour’ — ‘It is only an afternoon’ — ‘It is only an
evening,’ people say to me over and over again; but they don’t know that
it is impossible to command one’s self sometimes to any stipulated and
set disposal of five minutes — or that the mere consciousness of an
engagement will sometime worry a whole day … Who ever is devoted to an
art must be content to deliver himself wholly up to it, and to find his
recompense in it. I am grieved if you suspect me of not wanting to see
you, but I can’t help it; I must go in my way whether or no.”
“No”
makes us aloof, boring, impolite, unfriendly, selfish, anti-social,
uncaring, lonely and an arsenal of other insults. But “no” is the button
that keeps us on.