The Stallion Theory: How aimless creativity ruins your life

2024 ж. 14 Мам.
690 403 Рет қаралды

Is creativity all it's cracked up to be? And if it isn't... what can you do about it? This is the Stallion Theory...
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Пікірлер
  • You broke this down perfectly. I remember watching Jerry talk about not breaking the chain of writing one joke per day as his discipline. As a creative person - we think we want zero constraints and unlimited funding but it’s just not true. One of my recent projects came about from an experiment of drawing one journal page every day for 108 days. It didn’t matter if it was 1am or 3am. Knocking out that checkbox felt great and I also had no expectation of what the end result would be aside from something for myself. The project turned into a published book and oracle deck bought by a publisher. I believe it’s better to be proficient than to be perfect. Great work on this video

    @yaniksilver@yaniksilver10 ай бұрын
    • "Reflect upon the Past. Embrace your Present. Orchestrate our Futures." --Artemis 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ "Before I start, I must see my end. Destination known, my mind’s journey now begins. Upon my chariot, heart and soul’s fate revealed. In time, all points converge, hope’s strength re-steeled. But to earn final peace at the universe’s endless refrain, We must see all in nothingness... before we start again." 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ --Diamond Dragons (series)

      @Novastar.SaberCombat@Novastar.SaberCombat10 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for your story! Been in a slump so looking for new encouragement:-)

      @juliekovich-recordingartist@juliekovich-recordingartist10 ай бұрын
    • Congratulations, good work! I started to do that during COVID and after awhile got off track. Thanks for reigniting the desire to start again.

      @user-ut4zw6so6o@user-ut4zw6so6o10 ай бұрын
    • That's amazing, congrats! There's a 2.5 draft of a gothic novel I haven't looked at in months, but I used to wrote short scary stories when I was a teenager and after watching this and reading your story, I should get back into that!

      @alexandrahill9176@alexandrahill91768 ай бұрын
  • This video makes so much sense to me, i work freelance as a costume designer. Want to make my own brand but have been crippled by the freedom of being able to do whatever i please with it. I have invested money already to make it happen but after making a logo, cant seem to make myself design the actual pieces i wanna produce. I been stuck on this loop of today is the day or ill do it tomorrow, its been a few months…help.

    @18pristine@18pristine10 ай бұрын
    • Find out how it's serving you. Not doing it it's serving you in some way, more so, than doing it. We are wired to avoid change, and whatever is painful. Whatever we consider uncertain or energy consuming. Etc. If you find out how not doing it it's serving you, you can decide with your free will if it's worth it. And if you fall back into old patters, apparently, for that moment, it wasn't worth it. Thing is, you can change your mind every day. However, you need to remember that doing 1 thing, even though it might seem minuscule cause you have to do 1000 things. But doing 0, will always be 0. 1 can turn to 2. 0 remains 0. So take your wins as they come without judging. No one goes from crawling their whole life to suddenly walking. Don't be so cruel to yourself or others. It doesn't lead anywhere...literally. You'll fall down, it's normal, just get back up. Also, another thing that's helped me is playing it forward as well: if I keep doing what I enjoy doing today, like...drinking coffee, not sleeping and watching youtube, and if I keep doing it 2, 5, or 10 years, how will I feel? Will it be just as enjoyable? Will you be happy? Healthy? Is it worth the consequences basically? And does it push me toward my dream in any way? And no, this is not when I decided to quit social media and sleep. But to do my work first, play later. Even if my work was 10 minutes today, 5 hours tomorrow. It's still better than nothing. Also, I started using my 'play time' to do what I call 'research'. Soul-searching. Muse? Nah, just ...you know when you can't even cry about your life but then you put on a song that explains it perfectly? That which makes you feel anything, is my research. It's pure motivation. You see or hear something, and your mind changes it and makes it different and your own at the same time? Like one could look at a picture of a dress, and their mind would just go: but that'd look better. That color could be like this. In fact, something that I've never seen in my entire life is...and there's your inspiration. Creating anything worthwhile needs inspiration. Just working and not living...even if living means looking at other's people's work, be it reading, movies, youtube vids, games or whatever floats your boat, they can create that spark. Something someone has said or done might push you today. Use your feelings. Don't run from them. I literally search for shows that make me aware of life and death, of other perspectives, of other ways to look at my own experiences, past or present, of...etc. The world is your oyster. If you even allow yourself to think search for help/ inspiration, and look around, you might find something or someone to make you aware of what you even want to do with your art. The brain likes tasks and patterns when it involves just 'looking around'. The subconscious especially. Where your pain and joy lies is where you need to dig. Not in the numbness...escapism, fear, etc. What do you wish to change that you've even reached this path? What was it in your that just went: yes, this. I want to do this. How what you do can help someone else as well as your past self? What do you wish that costume to make that person feel? What do you wish you'd be able to wear, that doesn't exist yet? Basically: What need do you fill? And are you willing to sacrifice comfort, free time, and from what you're saying, are you willing to risk failing again and again until you maybe, make it, at something you love? Or are you willing to never start because it's better to fail at something you don't care about? There's no right or wrong answer. There's only a pause on that answer. Decide. Pick what's right for you. And whatever it is, jump into that boat. Be all in or all out. No more standing on the side-lines 'cause that's where you'll get...suffering, self-hate, trust-issues with yourself and just...not a happy life. If you don't want to do it, realize why. And if all you find is a valid reason, f it. If not, then dip your toe in the water and keep doing it as long as you can until you can start to swim. It's the middle of the day, I haven't slept for...24 hours and I had 3 coffees so I apologize for this TedTalk but I felt like saying this to you. Hoping it helps you. If it doesn't then sorry for making you read all of this, but when I know about something, 'cause I've been there, trust me, I am still there in some ways, then I want to share what I wish someone else would've told me. 'Cause later never comes. No one will hold your hand unless you're suppppper lucky and even then, you must put in some effort. But what I've realized after years, is that if it keeps bugging me and I just can't let it go and nothing's as good as that, I might as well give it a go. What do I have to lose? Really? What is there to lose? You fail, you're back in the same place you're now. Nothing much changes. You fail, you learn, you try again. Still in the same place. In the godlike chance you succeed, then great, you can keep going and this time, you'll have some support. But starting...is a lonely place and if you don't have a solid why and because, and be honest with yourself first and foremost...then why suffer in the first place? Again, thank you for listening to my TedTalk haha, and sorry. I tend to listen to my instinct and that's both good and bad, but this is what I felt like sharing with you. And I wish you all the best. Truly. Standing on the fence is sometimes, if not, most of the times... it's even harder than doing it. I know. Sometimes I wish that option didn't even exist.

      @nothanks5162@nothanks516210 ай бұрын
    • @@nothanks5162 bruh

      @WillyJunior@WillyJunior10 ай бұрын
    • @@nothanks5162what a reply ❤

      @CLEFT3000@CLEFT300010 ай бұрын
    • I'm an admin person who works with creatives. It's been such a shock to me, how I fix little things and my team acts like I moved mountains. I think we all need a manager-brain to help us through creative projects. (I can't take my own creative hobbies forward, so I too would like a manager!). Loving and hoping too much makes it hard to see the practical aspects of any endeavor.

      @michellekaiser-eo6lg@michellekaiser-eo6lg10 ай бұрын
    • I love Gloria Vanderbilt and to me her brand is the one I can count on to fit my waist and my hips. I love it when there are fun details like embroidery or buttons and such but the brand to me says the fit is going to match my body type and that builds trust. My suggestion is to pick a body type that your brand will fit and you will have customers for life and you can play with details you add too it.

      @michellesteimle9969@michellesteimle996910 ай бұрын
  • This is one of those videos that came into my life at the perfect time. Perfectionism has literally been ruining my life for the last 2-3 years but I finally feel like I'm starting to see the end of this tunnel

    @mayanightstar@mayanightstar10 ай бұрын
    • "Reflect upon the Past. Embrace your Present. Orchestrate our Futures." --Artemis 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ "Before I start, I must see my end. Destination known, my mind’s journey now begins. Upon my chariot, heart and soul’s fate revealed. In time, all points converge, hope’s strength re-steeled. But to earn final peace at the universe’s endless refrain, We must see all in nothingness... before we start again." 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ --Diamond Dragons (series)

      @Novastar.SaberCombat@Novastar.SaberCombat10 ай бұрын
    • oh yes me too… I wanted to do everything perfectly that I never even started doing anything at all because I was afraid of it not being perfect 😢

      @letbreathbeair@letbreathbeair10 ай бұрын
    • Congratulations to you! Our struggles to perfectionism is never ending but this video teaches us how to be creative and smart at the same time. It makes us more efficient since there is structure/framework that guides us accomplish things in a more organized manner.

      @grannyronna@grannyronna9 ай бұрын
    • Same. I'm a musician but also artist and I always end up drawing lots as practice but never having any complete piece to show off. Or starting up music projects then getting caught up in details and abandoning them. I'm trying to actually upload stuff to my channel now, even if it's subpar ..[insert shameless self-advertising]

      @ThePhospholipids@ThePhospholipids9 ай бұрын
    • @@letbreathbeair I've published ~420,000 words and 260+ illustrations over 3 of 6 books in my series. Claiming that all of it is "100% perfect" would be... folly. However, it's pretty fuggin' hardcore stuff. Freakin' GORGEOUS work, overall. Award-winning, actually. Tons of work, though. *Throngs.* 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨ "Before I start, I must see my end." --DD1 🐲✨🐲✨🐲✨

      @Novastar.SaberCombat@Novastar.SaberCombat9 ай бұрын
  • as a student graphic designer with adhd this has explained so much and this honestly helps me so much. I didn't know this was a thing but the creative anxiety where I do research all day instead of actually doing something is crazy.

    @sebasg.2709@sebasg.27097 ай бұрын
    • I’m 33, been making music since 2008, diagnosed with adhd a few months back. I was literally wondering if this video helped anyone with adhd and you were the next comment I read. Thanks, stay up.

      @crrtis@crrtis7 ай бұрын
    • This video would have been good to see when I was a art student. Good luck with your studies.

      @Pharozos@Pharozos5 ай бұрын
    • Seems like I have ADHD too then

      @romaroalte2645@romaroalte2645Ай бұрын
    • I can relate and I’m trying to get out of it

      @infiniteX3@infiniteX316 сағат бұрын
  • This is literally the reason I chose to go into visual design instead of fine art. I thrive on boundaries and my creativity has a box to think outside of, instead of a daunting sea of endless options. I needed this video sooo much today, as I’m literally missing class because of a domino effect of indecision. But now I have a sticky note above my desk that reads “quantity over quality. Creativity will come.” Thank you!

    @sarahs1368@sarahs136810 ай бұрын
    • Hmm. I've often thought to myself that I don't have the capacity for original ideas anymore. If I take something someone has already made, I can come up with awesome twists on the concept. Alternative interpretations. But never anything original. Stuff I come up with is always defined by the things I'm copying from. Its X meets Y, or its elements from A, B, and C. I'm also extremely indecisive and perfectionist. Crippled by it in fact. I will produce one artwork in a month, when even a particularly slow artist would only take maybe six hours to create the same thing. I wonder if the perfectionism is the reason I don't feel like I can make anything original.

      @ASpaceOstrich@ASpaceOstrich10 ай бұрын
    • @@ASpaceOstrich That's natural. I'm a songwriter, and I sometimes begin writing and just play what seems to be the most obvious boring interpretation of the music I like. But I am a practiced songwriter, so I drop that idea and try to do something new. If this happens a few times I'll stop and move on to something else for now. This can happen 25-50% of the time one week and not at all another. The key is exercising your creativity, because you'll always just be piecing together what you know, but your individual experience of life is very unique. So if you express that with confidence and practice, you'll see how your ideas are just as original as any idea ever was.

      @silixtuhibiski95@silixtuhibiski9510 ай бұрын
    • @@ASpaceOstrich Seems like making orginal things is quite hardcore. I struggle with it too. It seems like there is a barrier that I cant pass a box I cant escape. But on the other side of the box I feel that there is what I m looking for it must be possible to come up with something completely new

      @twinguy9633@twinguy963310 ай бұрын
    • @@ASpaceOstrich I feel this too!! I also do art and recently have been trying to develop some original characters more, but I feel that it’s so hard to do when there are just seemingly endless options and I can add and change things as much as I want. Whereas I find it way easier to take pre-existing characters and spin their stories in different ways or add different characteristics to them. I hope someday I can take control of my indecision haha

      @moontiides@moontiides10 ай бұрын
    • visual design but your avatar is a default "S" yeah right. the poor people hiring you, oh man xD

      @illsmackudown@illsmackudown10 ай бұрын
  • I wanted to write a comment about how it's a shame this video isn't longer... but the more I thought about it, the more I realized that it didn't need to be. Short, sweet, to the point, and absolutely amazing. Thank you for this.

    @JaRyCu@JaRyCu10 ай бұрын
    • If it was longer, we would spend more time watching and thinking, but not doing stuff.

      @agata1014@agata101410 ай бұрын
    • If this video was longer, I would totally procrastinating from watching it and pile it up with my other watch later list lol.

      @ghazie5555@ghazie555510 ай бұрын
    • I wish every YT vid were much shorter. That said, I’m exploring using ChatGPT for written summaries.

      @jz5005@jz500510 ай бұрын
    • If U slow it down to 0.75 or 0.5 speed, it kinda feels like u met a wise artist grandpa at a coffee shop whilst wandering downtown. It also makes the video longer. And it feels like a different video experience.....

      @kyrstenwetzel6575@kyrstenwetzel657510 ай бұрын
  • This video perfectly explains this feeling I've been having lately. Ironically enough, I found that the developing my skills to the point where I could draw almost anything is what hindered me the most and led me into a frozen state. What got me out of that state? The constraints of an assignment on a digital media team where I was responsible for creating posters based on specific academic subjects. As someone who always hated constraints on my creativity, I was shocked by how easy it was to create the posters, and how much joy I found in it as well. Fast forward about two weeks later, and I'm realizing that just like that stallion, I won't get anywhere if I don't harness all this energy into something more focused...so I'm gonna go work on that...later

    @Startr00per@Startr00per10 ай бұрын
    • Well, you had me going on your well written inspirational paragraph. I was thinking, hey, yeah, this is it. Until the last sentence. Now I'm back to square one.

      @oceancrosby4578@oceancrosby457810 ай бұрын
    • ⁠​⁠​⁠@@oceancrosby4578😭Well, on the bright side, I did end up working on it, and I’ve gotten more work done in the past few weeks than in the past few years! It took a bit to figure it out, but it’s possible

      @Startr00per@Startr00per10 ай бұрын
  • Love how you pointed out the duality in Freedom "Less Choice = More Action". It's so funny how it works, yet truly having active boundaries in your creativity (and life tbh) creates a system where you can just flow continuously 💛

    @NYKIRA@NYKIRA10 ай бұрын
  • I'm a big fan of Mark Rosewater, the lead designer of the card game Magic: The Gathering, and he has similar views on creativity. One of his repeated maxims is "restrictions breed creativity" and he's also advocated for systematizing creativity and often recommends the book A Whack On the Side of the Head by Roger von Oech

    @RocketSlug@RocketSlug10 ай бұрын
    • His lead is also IMO one of the best demonstrations of careful maximisation of design space over time. Magic had lots of opportunities to paint itself into corners and managed not to do so for a very long time.

      @PipFoweraker@PipFoweraker10 ай бұрын
    • Dominaria, and the MTG mechanics and cards, were made by Richard Garfield. Those older cards, though raw and unbalanced and of their time, are far more sought after. The Western quick buck model infested MTG and Wotc. The cards curl up, and aren't worth buying. Rosewater the plague. Too, overbalancing creates boredom after denaturaion and market saturation.

      @JakeyMan@JakeyMan10 ай бұрын
  • Exactly, EXACTLY what I’m struggling with right now. It’s like he reached through the screen and said, “hey, I’m talking to you.” It’s difficult because I know all the theory: action-orientation, fail fast mentality, how to overcome fear, etc - but unbounded freedom is a dangerous thing. It creates endless thoughts with no results, the feeling of being productive while producing nothing. Is anyone else struggling with this right now? I’m starting a business and jumping off an uncertain cliff and have been in an overwhelmed state. Who else is struggling with paralysis through your own creative thoughts?

    @bathtubmafia2042@bathtubmafia204210 ай бұрын
    • I'm right there with you. I've got multiple google docs full of a great variety of different ideas: Business ventures, apps, fictions, nonfictions, fanfictions, video games, and more. I've had various versions of these documents for most of my life, starting with torn out notebook paper - covered in chicken scratch - stuffed into blue folders I've acted on none of these ideas in productively substantial ways, outside of the occasional period of excessive brain-dumping

      @oliverlarosa8046@oliverlarosa804610 ай бұрын
    • I’m also here! It’s actually horrible. Also trying to set up a business. I know all the theory but actually have absolutely no constraints and it’s probably the worst thing I could have done. I needed this video!

      @dancinginmaltesers@dancinginmaltesers10 ай бұрын
    • OK. I've been there and done that. Successfully, not even close to big money, but I survived it. First, if you have decided that you want to do "A" and "B" for your business. Yeah, whatever. You may find that you need to do "C" just to survive or keep things up and running. You may very well hate doing "C", but what choice do you have? Maybe none. But you are surviving and can work on "A" and "B" in the background until those start to work, at least in part. Running your own business is tough. I had to rent two storage sheds out back to pay the electric and all the rooms beside my bedroom inside to buy food and pay the rent. You may need to do something completely different to set the stage, but get that done. Don't think about it, do it. After all, it isn't your goal exactly, but at least it's moving you towards your final goals. You may also need to do some "free" or "volunteer" work to get some work out there and visible to the public. Please note that it isn't "free" or "volunteer". It's a brutal task done because you have to, in order to get something unrelated to that in your future. You may very well have to set some goal like "I'm going to make this much money in this amount of time". I had to retire for health reasons. Now I find myself stuck once again in this very same problem. I have new creative things I want to do that I haven't done before. Now, I find myself stuck again! Learning and thinking a lot. Doing almost nothing. Yuck! This video is very helpful for me right now. Thanks for the video!

      @CrispyCircuits@CrispyCircuits10 ай бұрын
    • Read “The War of Art” by Steven Pressfield.

      @peachluck1050@peachluck105010 ай бұрын
    • I’m willing to bet there’s lot of us. I’m Currently trying to write a horror series and keep swapping multiple ideas and concepts. It’s maddening when you can’t make a clear decision and would rather procrastinate instead. Hope this stallion thing works.

      @nonameman7114@nonameman7114Ай бұрын
  • This is insanely relevant to me at this exact moment thanks for posting this haha!

    @RangoJalex@RangoJalex10 ай бұрын
    • same with me and for many years unfort.

      @shitchops@shitchops3 ай бұрын
    • praise the algorithm!

      @jimmythebold589@jimmythebold5892 ай бұрын
    • give thanks to the algorithm. or your search engine prowess!! @@shitchops

      @jimmythebold589@jimmythebold5892 ай бұрын
  • This resonates so much. Im a very creative person, constantly procrastinating by endless options ive accidentally created for myself, resulting in low productivity and output. Frozen by choice is so dang accurate

    @MandaPanda254@MandaPanda2545 ай бұрын
  • The Pomodoro method changed my life. I have so many different hobbies and projects I want to do, but some would get a lot of attention, while others were ignored for months or years. But if I do a little bit of everything for one hour a day, I'm constantly making progress at a consistent rate, I can now plan and predict in a way I couldn't before.

    @CourtneyCoulson@CourtneyCoulson10 ай бұрын
  • The godfather of habit building, William James, wrote: “To change one’s life: Start immediately. Do it flamboyantly. No exceptions.” Because our time is finite, there is no reason to wait. In fact, there is every reason to begin. When you decide on a change you would like to make, ask yourself: what is the first step? The entire vision of your ideal future is actually a series of first steps. They just happen to come one after the other. These are all moments you initiate. One little step at a time.

    @funnytv-1631@funnytv-163110 ай бұрын
  • Creative angst is such a good name for it! I'm not a big deadline person, but this definitely opens up my mind to different ways I can apply some constraints to my creativity to get me flowing. I've definitely been feeling the creative angst towards my webcomic, so some ways I can think of limiting myself is by limiting my style, the colors, or the composition(s).

    @esselmeyer8233@esselmeyer823310 ай бұрын
  • I needed this video. I've been writing the same script for ten years. I get asked "don't you want to write another story???" I couldn't imagine doing that, because this story needs to get done in the "perfect" way. as I age and my bones creak and my baby grows inside me, I realize the "perfection" is inside the creative process. I also realize I really want to write more than I want to overthink.

    @pettypsghetti@pettypsghetti10 ай бұрын
    • Here you go, a deadline. One month from now. Make it a horrible draft.

      @jobbimaster@jobbimaster9 ай бұрын
    • Perfectionism is the obsession with the imperfect. Don't strive for perfect otherwise you will only focus on what is not perfect. Just get it done because your heart drives you and stop following the mind that wants an impossible ideal. We are imperfect beings, meaning it is impossible to truly create anything "perfect" but we can sure as hell create meaning for ourselves and the people around us :) x

      @missmiller7@missmiller79 ай бұрын
  • This video helped me realize I’ve been stuck in analysis paralysis, or state orientation when it comes to choosing a career. I’ve been going back and forth with X makes more money that Y but I’m more passionate about Y but hey what if I did Z!? It’s been driving me crazy but this was definitely helpful to push me in the right path. Thanks Struthless 🖤✨

    @halahsmith9931@halahsmith993110 ай бұрын
    • I think is a little different type of conflict because is like your brain is fighting with your heart. Is nice to think a little about what you really want to do not what is reasonable because what parents said ,what society thinks plus somtiems things change , a job that is now well paid may not be well paid in the feature. My friends stadied Chinese and back then all were talking how well person knowing Chinese can earn but reality was a little different in the end

      @emila732@emila73210 ай бұрын
    • Young people hop from job to job because they're not really sure what they want, and that's fine. My advice is ask yourself what you like: Working outside or inside, driving a vehicle, working with people, working on a pc, working alone, etc. if you're not sure yet which domain/area you really love. Then the next question would be are you more of a technical person (like to solve problems) or more of a people person/ management (like to work with people and solve conflicts, lead them). Of course this might change over time and after being burned out by colleagues for years you'll love working alone.

      @klauseba@klauseba9 ай бұрын
  • I'm not going to go into long and boring details but you cannot even begin to imagine how this 12 minute video has helped me contextualise some pretty heavy shit that I've been dealing with recently having escaped from a pretty horrific time of my life where, amongst other things, I was actively prevented from being creative. I am now able to rebuild my life and be creative and this is just what I needed to stop the overthinking and achieve what I want. Thank you so much. PS I actually do have goats and Goat Simulator is pretty mild compared to some of the things they get up to!

    @snufkinhollow318@snufkinhollow31810 ай бұрын
  • Damn I needed this video right now! I'm stuck in an endless cycle of procrastination and perfection, but I think I'm gonna just set a 1 hour deadline every day to write something crappy just so I can actually DO something instead of being stuck in this paralysis all day!

    @Manj_J@Manj_J10 ай бұрын
    • Great plan, gonna apply it to myself too! Keep grinding!

      @nobudgetshortfilms5510@nobudgetshortfilms551010 ай бұрын
  • That creativity needs constraints is something I knew for some time, already. With my very severe ADHD in mind, I feel that the Stallion Theory even more applies to my needs. Because: No structure at all and my head is a 3D-Cloud-Map. I think I really found a good tool for alot of things for me here! ADHD, for me personally, is kind of like a rocket engine. Complex. If it works, it's pure, massive energy. But it needs alot of work and dedication so it works fine and stable. Due to my personal circumstances, I've learned most things alone. And instead of working, I struggled how to build up a working structure at all and find any kind of self-organisation and overview. I never learned that. And with overthinking for a veeeery long time? Well, vicious circle! Instead of focussing on a problem solution, I sat down with the problems and just listened aimlessly to their problems, wondering why nothing happenes. You forget about solutions and even rewards. This and the lack of progress intensified so much, I then had lost most interest and desire to do most things I actually love to do. I was totally reduced to daydreams and very few real results. So I was the extreme version of that. And this video just comes to the absolute best time. Thank you so much =)

    @iendros@iendros10 ай бұрын
    • Hope you're doing well as of today. Sending my best wishes to you.

      @beatrizazevedo7637@beatrizazevedo76375 ай бұрын
  • Hey, here’s a video idea: Creativity and mental health. I currently have been diagnosed with Bipolar/ADHD and the Pomodoro Technique has been a godsend as those “Keys/Fuel”. It’s not foolproof, but it does help. Speaking of: 5 min are up, back to work! Thanks for your videos!

    @Nutella0nToast@Nutella0nToast10 ай бұрын
    • Will definitely do! P.S.: I have those exact same diagnoses!

      @struthless@struthless10 ай бұрын
    • To what type of creative work do you use pomodoro? It doesn't seem effective for drawing where you need longer periods of concentration and while ADHD make it even harder to get in concenrate state, I feel I will not be able to get to drawing after 5 min break

      @emila732@emila73210 ай бұрын
  • the mild-mannered teacher in daria at one point told someone in the class "by setting boundaries it paradoxically sets you free!" (I'm paraphrasing here) - and that has stuck w/me ever since. it applies to literally everything you want to do, and I love that you fleshed out a whole system here to encapsulate the what, why, when, how and definition of done!

    @sparklypoof@sparklypoof10 ай бұрын
  • I think this might be the only art block/motivation/whatever video that really got through to me. Every other video I've seen just gives you a routine to follow, usually formatted as a "this is how I got gud" story, with no arguments for why it works other than "trust me bro". Nothing I've seen has really given me basic concepts I've felt like I could work with like this video.

    @nef36@nef3610 ай бұрын
  • Dude. I needed this. I experienced creative angst as a child, I was pretty advanced so I realized at around 8 I could do virtually anything. So… choice angst incoming. Now I’m a musician and novelist trying to make things work at 30. I wrote two novels in two years simply by writing at least five pages every day

    @coreyroberts47@coreyroberts4710 ай бұрын
  • Yay, this is the video I voted for! It reminds me of an exercise an old painting instructor gave us. We were to paint something using only 1 color plus black and white. He said too many choices can be overwhelming, that we can often be more creative with a limited palette. Thanks for another great video!

    @LaurieLondon@LaurieLondon10 ай бұрын
  • Nice video. Very relatable. My problem is always overthinking and wanting to achieve perfect results - once I actually start editing videos I get really into it and it's enjoyable. Definitely will be using that method to kickstart my creative engine in future!

    @tomrenegadefilms@tomrenegadefilms10 ай бұрын
    • I always have to tell myself, "The Perfect is the enemy of the Good."

      @stevenjlovelace@stevenjlovelace10 ай бұрын
  • Deadlines make so much sense, everytime I have a deadline I have so much more creativity

    @complexedbrain@complexedbrain3 ай бұрын
  • This is probably one of the most helpful videos I have ever seen! A concept I've occasionally seen mentioned in passing, but you lay it out so clearly and the worksheet makes it so easy to use. Thank you so much, keep up the awesome work :D

    @aashni23@aashni2310 ай бұрын
  • You're the only KZheadr whose sponsorships I don't have to skip over because you just get how to not make them cringe. One of the coolest humans on the internet.

    @friendsinholyspaces@friendsinholyspaces10 ай бұрын
  • I’ve been struggling in a creative block myself that has since morphed into a stallion bulldozing its way through my mental sanity. I appreciate this video so much as offering a different perspective and possibly a way I can try and re-harness said stallion. Brilliantly created, as always. I appreciate you and your work very much. Thank you!

    @chizwiffle@chizwiffle10 ай бұрын
  • You’re one of those creators I actually am grateful is out here on KZhead doing stuff for us to get inspired from. Thank you for your work 🙏🏻

    @tekilatree@tekilatree10 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for articulating not just this but a lot of very relatable struggles. Been watching you since art college, I didn't pursue art professionally but I still check in when you pop up

    @ed-wh8ih@ed-wh8ih10 ай бұрын
  • I have always been amazed by this. When I have only one sketchbook and a pen, the sketchbook gets filled. Otherwise, I'm stuck overthinking what to use, what to do, whether it will be a good use of that sketchbook or paint... Currently, I am stuck setting up the new bullet journal for the second half of the year. I took me about 2 hours just to decide on which of the printed images I will glue in because I printed too many... and I printed them because I was afraid of being stuck deciding what to paint or draw... I realize how stupid this is and that there is no bullet journal police that will punish me for using an image I really like just because I have previously used it... While I know this, theoretically, I find myself in this situation so often, that I am really questioning my sanity. So, thank you so much for ending the struggle of deciding what to glue in and finally do what I actually wanted to do... my half-year reset (also, thanks for that concept and document!) Truly, thank you for your work and for the perfect timing and topic of this video! All the best!

    @BelIa42@BelIa4210 ай бұрын
  • All of my progress with drawing lately has been during my normal lunch break at work. I have an hour but I give myself no more than 45 minutes to start and finish a drawing and its been a wonderful thing.

    @fartburglar@fartburglar10 ай бұрын
  • This video started to give me anxiety half way through because I knew it was giving me the tools I need to get out of my creative angst and I don't know if I'm ready.

    @RhiHalo@RhiHalo9 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for that - and for many of your other videos. The struggle to figure out what to do with all that mess of creativity is real and you've given me so many good frameworks to both quiet down and start things.

    @alyyksinspace@alyyksinspace10 ай бұрын
  • Main lesson I learned from your recent few videos: Just be some random person doing things. Imperfect action is king. Perfectionism really is destructive fr. Hard pill to swallow, but thank you, Cam.

    @highsol222@highsol22210 ай бұрын
    • That's a great way to put it. It so how do you get orders if your just a somebody?

      @syzygy4365@syzygy436510 ай бұрын
  • I find myself overthinking things! The "life has a deadline" line ... Really got me! Always great content and always well explained. 💖

    @pipedreamss@pipedreamss10 ай бұрын
  • I'm such a Struthless fan and this video is exactly why. So much relevance packed into 12 minutes. Good stuff I'll use right away to focus my creativity, but also so many great ideas when I see my students struggling with the same thing...as I often do. Thanks again for putting valuable, relevant content out there.

    @user-bh5mw3nh4o@user-bh5mw3nh4o2 ай бұрын
  • I've been doing a lot of life style changes this year, and now thanks to this video I have more tools to use. Fantastic video, keep up the great work!

    @Voltron1232@Voltron123210 ай бұрын
  • I'm only halfway through, but I was just thinking about how your videos are so helpful and inspiring not *just* because of the stellar content, but also because of how you execute them. I love the use of metaphors and examples that feel like they're coming out of left field (e.g. the jam story). It's super engaging and makes a spark light up in my brain. Love it! Not to mention the visuals add to this feeling too. Anyway, off to finish the rest of the video now 😆

    @kingfisher-sv1rb@kingfisher-sv1rb10 ай бұрын
    • Also, I was one of the people who voted on this video being put out next -- so glad it got chosen!

      @kingfisher-sv1rb@kingfisher-sv1rb10 ай бұрын
    • Your comment explained exactly how I feel after watching this. Stellar content indeed

      @andela212@andela21210 ай бұрын
  • A great, under-rated, example of working within constraints is the Raveonettes. The Raveonette's first album is written in entirely one key, with only the same four chords, and each song is under three minutes. It's amazing

    @chrisnaish@chrisnaish10 ай бұрын
  • Every new video you put out just blows me away. Your content is entertaining and relatable while being highly informative. Keep doing what you're doing, and a massive thanks for sharing it with us all!

    @SophanaR@SophanaR10 ай бұрын
  • You sir, are doing the creative community a big service. Thank you for breaking this down. It’s a start to getting my creative brain in gear. 👊🏽

    @theaanch@theaanch10 ай бұрын
  • I randomly ran across one of your videos earlier last month, and I've been binging your videos and reading your book because your perceptions and journey so far deeply resonate with me. It feels insanely personal, and I am happy that my algorithm worked its way to coming across to see your content. I am a filmmaker who struggles a lot with my mental limitations and traumas, but I'm getting by. I just want to let you know that seeing you create and share your work every time, regardless of the subject matter, feels reassuring and refreshing every time I watch them. Thank you.

    @maybeitsceline@maybeitsceline10 ай бұрын
  • Watching this on the day of release or when someone stumbles across your channel 5 years from now during a creative rut at 3 in the morning, you give your audience an authentic, realistic approach to so many thing. I still watch and quote "this is not content" and refer people to it. Keep doing you, sending much love

    @jexcalder5466@jexcalder546610 ай бұрын
    • Checking in 8 months later - I needed this

      @ribena.drinker@ribena.drinker2 ай бұрын
  • Im a freelance artist and woodworker, and this video seriously resonated with me mate. Finding that focus to funnel all thay creativity down is great, love how you broke this down. Cheers!

    @Cederlof_Ink@Cederlof_Ink10 ай бұрын
  • You have literally hit the nail on the head. I needed to be reminded of this so much at this exact moment. Thank you.

    @holly-leedickson6414@holly-leedickson641410 ай бұрын
  • This is such a fantastic video, it really resonates with me. I was working in a role where my brief was essentially, "make content" and I really struggled to get anything done. I had so much freedom and no deadlines. I'm now in a role with far more structure, contraints, and deadlines and I feel so much fulfilled. It's awesome to see you put into words exactly what i was thinking. It's inspiring to know that it's not just me. Thank you for this piece 👊

    @lachlanhodge1501@lachlanhodge150110 ай бұрын
  • Absolute amazing video, actually sat down with myself two days ago and said 'I think I need some constraints in my creative process.' Thank you for this wisdom, keep up the amazing work!!!

    @spyderwillster@spyderwillster10 ай бұрын
  • This came at the perfect time. The allowance and, at times, love of structure is a really new thought for me, but this sums up what I’ve been meditating on perfectly. Thank ya!

    @finntailor3851@finntailor385110 ай бұрын
  • This sums up the last 40 years of my creative life. No joke. Thank you.

    @vincentp149@vincentp1496 ай бұрын
  • Man this was so helpful, thank you thank you thank you. I’m still falling into perfectionism and procrastination patterns with my last uni unit and all the creative projects I’ve been wanting to share. The stallion has been running free for a very long time and it ain’t healthy at all so thank you for this video! I was scared to watch it but it’s just what I’ve needed! I’m going to write my draft of proposal for my assessment in 1 hour today and remember done is better than perfect and I’m going to publish this comment now in the 3 minutes I gave myself so I don’t spend half an hour writing something and then deleting it all and not posting it like I have in the past LEL thank you so much Struthless (and Seinfeld), it’s time to reign her in woot woot! Sending hugs and support to all going through it xxx

    @studio_slamb@studio_slamb10 ай бұрын
  • Great video. Entertaining and informative. I'm inspired and motivated!

    @theseanwardshow@theseanwardshow7 ай бұрын
    • Dang I remember watching your Goblin videos when I was a kid man, those videos had me dying laughing! Time flies man, and it's awesome to see you're still making people laugh years later 😎👏

      @RandomizationShow@RandomizationShow5 ай бұрын
    • @@RandomizationShow Holy shit there's some world's collide action right there!!

      @theseanwardshow@theseanwardshow5 ай бұрын
    • the internet is full of this kind of crap, I can solve non creative people that think they are creative. I think it's big pile of **** by unqualified people.

      @RusticRaver@RusticRaver2 ай бұрын
  • I love reading the comments, they're as full of interesting discussion as the videos! And this one is one that I've definitely needed for a while. I'm starting to realize the limits of limitless creativity, and am now carrying out the required steps to focus my creativity into my projects. Thanks sooo much!

    @foxxify1@foxxify110 ай бұрын
  • It’s so lovely to see you back in my feed! Thanks so much for the new upload. Excellent stuff.

    @chasecampan-thornburg1721@chasecampan-thornburg172110 ай бұрын
  • Yes! Love Creative limitations + a simple way to brainstorm through the weeds and get unstuck. ✨🥰

    @MindfulCreativeMuse@MindfulCreativeMuse10 ай бұрын
  • Something I love about struthless is that he uses real life examples and then almost always offers an actionable strategy. These videos must take a lot of time to script, structure and edit! Appreciate the mahi (work).

    @GrowWM@GrowWM8 ай бұрын
  • This is video is pure gold for anyone who needs this info. Thank you!!

    @WassimElSabeh@WassimElSabeh6 ай бұрын
  • I can’t thank you enough for creating this video. People like me are lost without structural discipline, and struggle to find genuine council outside of ourselves. The world would be lost without people like you.

    @CANCAN-qf9rh@CANCAN-qf9rh10 ай бұрын
  • Gold, this creative discipline discusssion is good, love what jerry says about religion and systematising

    @billymills4238@billymills423810 ай бұрын
  • this is so lovely and its exactly true that creativity needs boundaries and focus. too bad whenever I set any kind of deadline for myself my brain just ignores them :/

    @pridefall3304@pridefall330410 ай бұрын
    • 😂 me2

      @Ari-Artform@Ari-Artform10 ай бұрын
    • Same 😭

      @HinataElyonToph@HinataElyonToph10 ай бұрын
    • ADHD

      @parisbreakfast@parisbreakfast10 ай бұрын
    • yeah same... we might need some other Brain-Trick for that 🤣

      @Kononekaya@Kononekaya10 ай бұрын
  • i think this explains a lot of why I've had issues with creating lately. I got the whole world open to me for story telling, and get stressed out and overwhelmed too quickly. thanks for the vid, this helped a lot

    @storytimewiththecrimsondm1318@storytimewiththecrimsondm131810 ай бұрын
  • The more I watch your content, the more I'm starting to think you're my favorite content creator. Your issues are so relatable, but above that, the way you put things into perspective and offer solutions is even more relatable and practical. I'm really grateful for your work!

    @9Nikko8@9Nikko810 ай бұрын
  • I always functioned better with creative projects when it was a school assignment. The assignment was always exploring a certain medium in a certain style, technique or subject. I usually tried to operate at the edge of those restrictions, my art either coming out as whimsical and strange or with an undrtone of dark humor. Not in school anymore and I've found it impossible to produce anything creative. There is some trauma mixed into this, like trauma that changed me and made me associate the art i normally love making as a reminder of the shitty past. I'd like to get back into it. I feel like I have a much better grasp on myself now. But my perfectionism and over thinking always kicks in. Your videos really help me tbh. You talk about these aspects in ways I don't normally hear people talk about and show the struggles you have too. I haven't been super consistent, but I've been journaling and drawing a lot more and I'd give you a little credit for it. Thank you for your videos. Also green eggs and ham was my favorite book as a kid ❤

    @Hi_Im_Akward@Hi_Im_Akward10 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for making this video. I've been struggling creatively.... Too much freedom.. And other things. You get it. You really get it. I share your videos often.

    @Joeltraylorart@Joeltraylorart10 ай бұрын
  • This is stuff I learned in composition class at Butler University years ago "The more boundaries I place upon myself, the more free I become. " - Stravinsky

    @guitarmusic524@guitarmusic52410 ай бұрын
  • I *HATE* this about myself. I do this to a pathological extent. Every single day. So many shiny things, ideas, interests 💀 And because I’m getting on in my late 30s, and lockdowns ruined me financially (literally poorer, more unstable now than at 19)…things are becoming REAL. So i guess the positive angle on this is that I’m now *acutely* aware of it, so I can change it. Bless your cotton socks for this video ❤

    @CLEFT3000@CLEFT300010 ай бұрын
  • I adore the way you make it real. Thank you for always having that extra step of 'how' in what you're teaching. And even providing handouts. You've got the gift for this.

    @melindastclair@melindastclair10 ай бұрын
  • Struth, this kind of down to earth multilayered stuff is the reason I love your videos so much. And also, thanks for the book, I enjoyed reading it. Glossed over the exercises though. Thumbs up!

    @di4352@di435210 ай бұрын
  • What a great video! I found myself trapped on this weird stressful cycle of overthinking, now I understand the reason and a way to find an exit. Thanks for inspiring ✨

    @sichemrizo8496@sichemrizo849610 ай бұрын
  • I'm just starting the video but I just wanna say that based off of how this video is going, this information would really help me figure out myself creatively while being more realistic. I'm an artist who loves working with watercolor and inks but I also love writing stories, poetry, doing story boarding, photography, videography and video editing. Though I'm not a professional with the majority of these things, they are things I love to do and I'm passionate about. What to do? Where to go? How can I be creative and make a living off of it? Still trying to figure it out without spreading myself thin. Stay tuned!

    @freebirdarts@freebirdarts10 ай бұрын
    • Update: my conclusion to the video is to take advantage of the art of limitations / constraints. Too many options will hinder or more often prevent you from starting, continuing or finishing something. It's not bad to like many things like I do but as mentioned, I shouldn't allow it to stretch myself thin. It would be better that I implement constraints to avoid losing to the paradox of freedom. I read a quote from another comment under this video by @sarahs1368 that says, "Quantity over quality. Creativity will come." I believe this quote helps break out of the perfectionist or "everything I do must be good" mentality. Thanks for sharing that, Sarah. 🤗

      @freebirdarts@freebirdarts10 ай бұрын
  • Creativity responds incredibly well to structure

    @niharikaawasthi9238@niharikaawasthi923810 ай бұрын
  • This has helped me so much to get back on track creatively. To have something I can see, something set in stone, is extremely beneficial for me. Thank you!

    @JackieMel@JackieMel10 ай бұрын
  • This video resonated me so much, both logically and emotionally, which is super rare for me. Thank you so much for making these videos and hope you continue!

    @Jonathan-rm6kt@Jonathan-rm6kt10 ай бұрын
  • Wow, man, such a great way of thinking about this. I'm a fiction writer who has had a lot of success in the past but have been struggling to produce lately. This video really clarified some things for me. Really appreciate you making this and putting it out there.

    @davidvonallmen19@davidvonallmen1910 ай бұрын
  • This is the very best thing I’ve seen about practical creativity. Thanks for the template and keep creating these videos, you’re awesome :)

    @wesleyjoachim@wesleyjoachim4 ай бұрын
  • I've been stuck with creative block lately from too much freedom and then BAM your video pops up on my feed like it was a sign from above! Fastastic video man it really nailed what I'm currently going through thanks for making this also been subbed for a while really dig this channel cheers struthless

    @ozgoldtimes@ozgoldtimes10 ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much. I really struggle to find my focus on anything, especially my dreams. I'm going to try this out for sure. Thanks again. Keep it up! I just subscribed and looking forward to seeing what else you have to share and what else you will have in the future.

    @achildofanarchy3299@achildofanarchy329910 ай бұрын
  • Thanks good to see you back! I too did a lot of thinking with a newborn to toddler and finding more balance and creativity now.

    @madebytaran@madebytaran10 ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much for your stallion-harnessing worksheet; I appreciate your generosity. Also? Love you work, daahling! I've appreciated your humour for a long time now x

    @ElBeeEss@ElBeeEss7 ай бұрын
  • This is a concept I’ve completely forgot about. I’ve started my own channel and realized I am also going through this phenomenon and think this is a good way to guide my creativity. This video resonates well and feels personal, from one creative to another. Thank you for this video

    @baboucarrjatta8660@baboucarrjatta86609 ай бұрын
  • This is pure gold and exactly what I needed to see today. Thank you!

    @FruitSnackMatt@FruitSnackMatt6 ай бұрын
  • I've been stick on writing my own book for like 8 months now. Thank you so much for this, your work is very much appreciated.

    @saber_tooth_tiger@saber_tooth_tiger10 ай бұрын
  • I'm such a Struthless fan and this video is exactly why. So much relevance packed into 12 minutes. Good stuff I'll use right away to focus my creativity, but also so many great ideas when I see my students struggling with the same thing...as I often do. Thanks again for putting valuable, relevant content out there. 😍😍😍

    @Crenshawtutoring@Crenshawtutoring9 ай бұрын
  • love your content so much I have a lot of charactertraits in common with you and your vids always gave me the chills to feel understood

    @Mo-xn4cx@Mo-xn4cx10 ай бұрын
  • i love u struthless, every video of u has changed my life, really big big impact content, thank you so much ily fr

    @elcocoleo@elcocoleo10 ай бұрын
  • Great video, I can definitely relate. I have seen this played out in my life time and time again. Usually with work or school projects I could get those done to a level I was somewhat satisfied with within the time constraints... but then my personal creative endeavors never got completed. I would move from one project to the next, spending so long on them that my skills and goals would change and develop to the point that the project no longer reflected what I was capable of/what I wanted to share with the world. It's painful at first to put time limits on creative projects, and have to "surrender" them, but after doing it enough times and getting into a routine, it became so much easier!

    @remnantcrusade@remnantcrusade10 ай бұрын
  • This is a lesson I have learned many times over. Perfect timing for a refresher today. Thank you! Limitations are the key to creative flourishing!

    @TheZGALa@TheZGALa6 ай бұрын
  • Omg a canva pro trial is exactly what I needed right now

    @simpublic89@simpublic896 ай бұрын
  • This is exactly the sort of advice I needed to see today. Thank you. I always thought about art as this delicious elixir that you brew, but unless it's put into a container will just spill out in every direction and be completely undrinkable.

    @GaruxPuru@GaruxPuru10 ай бұрын
  • Struthless, your timing is impeccable. You dropped this video exactly when I needed it

    @reagle9315@reagle931510 ай бұрын
  • I really needed to see this. I appreciate the awesome video, and thanks for the worksheet download!

    @Robert_Byland@Robert_Byland10 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely needed this. I'm the type that definitely strives off of organization and, like this video suggests, healthy restrictions. This video helped me to remember those things, because I had honestly lost sight of how imporant those things are to me as I've just been caught up in life. I've been so focused on the daily turmoils that i forgot how to focus on my creations, and after a while i literally forgot how to focus and motivate myself. I've been dreading the feeling of having all of the passion and all of the overflowing ideas, and so little of the motivation or structure i feel like i need to get me off that metaphorical couch. I still dont think college is the ideal route for me, but that doesnt mean i cant get creative and apply some restrictions and better goals for myself. God is good, and i think He helped me find your video for a good reason. Thank you for putting your wisdom out for the world!

    @Reveur_Lucide@Reveur_Lucide10 ай бұрын
  • A lot of this is already what I had been coming up with on my own which is really refreshing to hear that I'm on a good path. I was getting frustrated with myself for talking myself out of practicing painting and thinking of ways to get myself to put pencil to paper, so to speak, and paint more. Things which especially have helped has been selecting 1-3 brushes only, no more, and limiting palette, no full spectrum color selection. Limitation really feeds into creativity and innovation so much. The stuff I work on now, even casual sketches and light studies, I look back on and am excited to see them still. That I did those. Eventually I'll look back and feel some measure of, "well I can do that better now" but for now, I am just impressed with what I'm capable of when I stop giving myself full freedom of options.

    @remygallardo7364@remygallardo736410 ай бұрын
  • So much practical truth in 12mins 45sec!! Thanks for this!

    @ignaxing@ignaxing10 ай бұрын
  • It's totally cool to be in agreement with the approach you're presenting (focus over freedom) then see you go into a Canva ad, since Canva's where I do my own work.

    @toddjacksonpoetry@toddjacksonpoetry10 ай бұрын
  • I really need to to hear this today!! My thinking, over-thinking and more thinking brain is keeping me hostage!

    @user-cl3ke9by1h@user-cl3ke9by1h10 ай бұрын
  • love that you made this and "half year turn around" videos back to back, now i will try my best to use this tool for building a system for achieving goals)) at first, this stallion approach made me kind of iffy because yeah yeah i know i heard it million times but then, as you kept going, i was thinking of how anything i ever finished was for uni or for work once again, something in your presentation disarms me and makes me really consider your words, thank you))

    @wa5657@wa565710 ай бұрын
  • This is exactly the missing link I was waiting for. And you, Sir, are a genius!

    @annaconda76@annaconda765 ай бұрын
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