UA-36582162-1 Own Your Creativity - The Good Fail

Episode 3

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Published on:

28th Oct 2019

Own Your Creativity

Today we are discussing how owning your creativity can be the first step in doing the Good Fail.

WEEKLY UPDATE.

We quickly dive into how we’ve been failing and succeeding this week.

WHAT DO WE MEAN WHEN WE SAY OWNING YOUR CREATIVITY?

Giving ourselves permission to call ourselves *insert title here*. Whether that be artist or actor or director or designer, sometimes Imposter Syndrome can get in the way and we feel like we don’t have the right to give ourselves these titles. This can also apply to non-creative pursuits.

OUR PERSONAL STRUGGLE TO GIVE OURSELVES PERMISSION.

I’m writing a novel but it isn’t published yet, can I call myself a writer? I’ve worked on small acting projects but can’t get onto Spotlight, can I call myself an actor? I feel physically sick when I consider calling myself either. 

I’m quite happy to call myself an illustrator but can’t actually talk about what I do without my insides winkling up in utter agony. This all stems from Imposter Syndrome.

WHAT ARE WE SCARED OF?

We’re scared that people will judge us and mock us, for being so silly and delusional. That they’ll see we don’t know what we’re doing and won’t like us for it. But should we care?

WHEN IS IT OKAY TO START CALLING YOURSELF *INSERT TITLE HERE*?

This can lead to more questions but is the answer to all of them that we shouldn’t care?

SHOULD WE JUST GIVE OURSELVES PERMISSION TO DO AND BE WHAT WE WANT?

Yes! People are breaking free of traditional roles now and seeking individual self-identity. If someone has the courage to identify themselves as the opposite gender to how they were born, then I can call myself an artist.

SO WHY IS IT SO SCARY?

Because giving ourselves permission to be that thing also gives us permission to fail at being it.

CONCLUSION.

Owning our creativity is the first step in doing the Good Fail.

WEEKLY RECOMMENDATION.

Big Magic by Elizabeth Gilbert

A self-help book that encourages you to just get on with it and be the creative you dream of being. 

SUPPORT THE SHOW

You can become an official supporter of the show by joining our Good Fail club on Patreon. Visit: www.patreon.com/thegoodfail

FIND US ON SOCIAL MEDIA

If you're not tired of us yet, you can also find us in these social places:

Instagram - @pretty_messy_official

@merlemade_tales

Facebook - @thegoodfailers

@merlemadetales

Pinterest - @merlemadetales

The Web - www.merlemadetales.com

MUSIC FOR THE GOOD FAIL BY:

https://filmmusic.io "Dreamy Flashback" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

Show artwork for The Good Fail

About the Podcast

The Good Fail
A guide from creatives on not giving up.
The Good Fail is brought to you by twin sisters Merle and Abra Hunt, Illustrator and writer/actor respectively, as they navigate life as creators and the struggle to keep going in the face of apparent failure.
Together this is their response to the medias onesided image of success. They're learning to embrace their failure and turn it into a positive, bringing you a different perspective on what it looks like to succeed in the creative business and life in general.



Music for The Good Fail by:
https://filmmusic.io
"Dreamy Flashback" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com)
License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
Support This Show

About your host

Profile picture for Abra & Merle Hunt

Abra & Merle Hunt

It started with finger painting, progressed to reams and reams of stick figures, scribbles, mother eating ghosts and anatomically incorrect spiders, grew into days spent in our room creating fantastical worlds we would draw and write about in fastidious detail, blossoming exponentially outwards as all encompassing hobby transformed to dedicated passion, when all school work came complete with intricate borders and full page drawings; we found new ways to express our inner world by breathing life into characters on stage and we counted the minutes we had to spend doing sports and maths lessons like they were hours. Later our creative zeal focused into a three year bachelors degree in illustration and a masters in creative writing, with it all finally culminating in a half finished illustrated novel, launching illustrated stationery business Merle Made Tales, collaborating on commissions for wedding and event stationery, getting the first few paid acting jobs and launching this podcast. One way or another, we were always going to be creators.