09 Oct 2006
Posted by J. Angelo Racoma as Blogs and blogging, Creativity, Problogging, Productivity, Writing
Problogging—and the non-income generating kind of blogging, for that matter—is like writing a book or painting, or sculpting. You need to get yourself in that state where you feel most creative. You need to be in the zone. You need to get into the flow. Get your head in the game.
Here’s something I wrote about the creative environment on Blogging Pro. When I quit my day job, I started to write and blog for a living full-time. I stayed at home most of the time, but I found that stifling to my creativity, since I did not have a space of my own for me to work on my creative endeavors.
I realized, however, that staying at home everyday proved to be as stifling to creativity as well. So at times I went out to cafés, parks and malls to write to experience the outdoors for a change. It worked quite well–again, the stimulus provided to be helpful in gearing my mind towards writing interesting stuff (stuff that gets people’s nod, judging from how some of my articles had been DUGG to front page). Still, I realized I can’t just go out all the time. There had to be a sense of regularity and familiarity. There had to be that sweet spot wherein I would feel most energized and excited. And considering that I worked best at nights up to the wee hours of the morning, I couldn’t just wander around at will.Probably the best thing I did recently was move my family out from our previous apartment to a relatively bigger place. The old place was getting cramped, and I could already feel the strain of not having a creative environment to work in. This time I have a room all to myself as my home-office, which I try to keep free from distractions and the un-creative stuff. Okay, the kids sometimes watch DVDs and play on the computers (yes, several of them here, all online, all energy-consuming), but I still get to have a space of my own. And having this space that I can control and derive inspiration from is essential in creativity.
One of the best things about problogging and writing freelance is the the freedom of not having to clock in at the office each morning and out each afternoon/evening. This was one of the things I hated when I worked the corporate grind. If you’re the creative type, you simply cannot work this way.
Still, some routine and familiarity are helpful in getting into the flow of things. You’ve heard of writers and artists having strange habits that help them get in their creative moods, whether it’s drinking (does alcohol boost creativity?), typing on manual typewriters, sharpening dozens of pencils before writing, and the like. In this digital age, this still holds true. If you want to be good at what you do, you have to look for the environment that best helps you get creative.
Think science. Science think.
Tags: blogging, Blogs and blogging, Creativity, environment, Problogging, Productivity, Writing | Viewed 2421 times
10 Responses
Alex
October 9th, 2006 at 6:25 am
1Amen to this, bro.
I really wonder why companies restrict their creative people too much with the constant excuse of “professionalism.” Sheer irony of needing that creativity while providing restricting policies that stifle it.
Here’s an article I wrote a while back.
J. Angelo Racoma
October 9th, 2006 at 6:30 am
2That’s an interesting thought, Alex. Here’s another article by Kathy Sierra about companies claiming to be on the lookout for the bold, creative individuals, but actually prefer the worker bees in the end.
Corsarius
October 9th, 2006 at 7:20 am
3we’re akin when it comes to blogging and creativity. even the slightest inconvenience (a sudden gust of wind, for example) sometimes disrupts my work for the day…which means I have to play a PC game to ‘release’ the frustration. palusot
my dad’s coaxing me to turn my room into a mini-office, complete with the aircon. problem is, i’ll be the one who’ll shell out the dough!
btw, quite a similar article from my end: How to Dance With Your Soul
J. Angelo Racoma
October 9th, 2006 at 8:23 am
4I’ve learned to deal with inconveniences. I usually think things up in my head in advance so that even if something interrupts me while typing, I’m still dictating my words to myself in my head so they’re all ready for the fingers to do the keyboard work the moment the interruption is over.
Go ahead shell out the dough!
It will be helpful both to you and your tools-of-the-trade. My office isn’t air-conditioned right now, and the computers get hot when the weather’s warm. I’m not too keen on turning a bedroom into an office, though, since there will always be the tempation to hit the sack. And I read somewhere that you should limit use of the bedroom for sleeping and lovemaking (not that you can’t do this elsewhere, ehem, ehem). Work, reading, and all other activities should be done elsewhere.
J. Angelo Racoma
October 9th, 2006 at 4:52 pm
5Hello.
jhay
October 9th, 2006 at 11:53 pm
6My dream environment for blogging or doing something creative is the Pixar HQ,
But I’m all thumbs with going outdoors rather than staying at home most of the time. Since I don’t have my own laptop yet, I always bring my trusty old pen and small notebook for those sudden ‘eureka’ moments.
J. Angelo Racoma
October 10th, 2006 at 8:03 am
7Jhay, I’m sure Pixar would be cool. Is it like the Googleplex?
Pen and paper can be good, too—no bootup times, no dying batteries, no software problems. Too bad, I have lousy handwriting and sometimes can’t decipher what I write myself.
j4s0n
October 10th, 2006 at 2:55 pm
8For me, since I don’t blog to somebody else, And I seldom care on what I write. I just blog. LOL! Let out the desires of mah heart and get wild writing what comes out of my mind. And I just found out since I started my jason.com.ph, Blogging for me is too time consuming and exhausting. Regardless on what environment I’m in. Mwahahahaha!
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