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The Widening Steam By David Ulrich 

The Widening Steam By David Ulrich 

The Widening Steam By David Ulrich 

 The 7 Stages of Creativity 

  1. Discovery & Encounter
  2. Passion & Commitment
  3. Crisis & Creative Frustration 
  4. Retreat & Withdrawal 
  5. Epiphany & Insight
  6. Discipline & Completion 
  7. Responsibility & Release 

The Widening Steam By David Ulrich explains, The urge to create—to use our minds, hearts, and hands in unison; to work with materials; to express ourselves and our observations, our deepest longings, our greatest aspirations, our joys, and sorrows—is one of the basic human impulses. Every person holds the potential to enter the stream of discovery and invention. Each of us contains a vast wealth of inner resources that invite us to participate in the process of creation.

Other Resources for creative reading 

Creativity 

Losing an Eye 

Right Seeing

Surrender & Balance 

Creative Expression 

3 Questions of Creative Expression 

Love the Questions

An Approach to Style: Seeking Authentic Expression

Essence and Personality 

Gurdjieff refers to this fundamental division in the human being as essence and personality.

The process of working in an art form is a distillation, a clearing of the water, an alchemical refinement that reflects our deepest core.

I have things in my head that are not like what anyone has taught me—shapes and ideas so near to me—so natural to my way of being and thinking that it hasn’t occurred to me to put them down. I decided to start anew—to strip away what I had been taught—to accept as true my own thinking. This was one of the best times of my life. There was no one around to look at what I was doing—no one interested—no one to say anything about it one way or another. I was alone and singularly free, working into my own, unknown—no one to satisfy but myself. —Georgia O’Keeffe

Finding Our Unique Voice 

In The Soul’s Code: In Search of Character and Calling, James Hillman proposes what he calls the “acorn theory,” that every individual has within themselves the seed of a unique calling, a daimon which accompanies the soul and is the “carrier of your destiny.” He believes that every person is born with this inner image of completeness, much like an acorn, which later manifests as a mature oak by following a vague, yet persistent, inner call.

Sustained Concentration (Flow & In the Zone) 

 

CREATIVE PRACTICE 

Questions 

2 Passion and Commitment

RIDING THE RAPIDS 

 

The only answer that I can honestly provide is simple: Why do you fall in love with this person and not that one? It grows naturally out of our being. Or, as Alfred Stieglitz observed: “If what one makes is not created with a sense of sacredness, a sense of wonder; if it is not a form of love-making; if it is not created with the same passion as the first kiss, it has no right to be called a work of art.”

After making a particularly salient point and witnessing a crow flying over at that very moment, don Juan said to Carlos Castaneda: “See, the world agrees with me.”

Passion

It is in the nature of the creative process that we strive to nurture and support our own efforts toward creative expression with kindness, compassion, and the proper inner and outer conditions. Yet that is not enough. For our creative energies to fully emerge, we must continually challenge our ego and false personalities.

Ken Wilber makes a qualitative distinction between real compassion and “idiot” compassion when he states: “What most people mean by ‘compassion’ is: please be nice to my ego. Well, your ego is your own worst enemy, and anybody being nice to it is not being compassionate to you.” We need to be ruthless and push beyond our own perceived boundaries of our limited understandings, abilities, and tendencies—not to indulge our sly personal demons. Genuine creativity unambiguously asks that we staunchly resist the ego’s insistent voices, which manifest as influences that are self-calming (“this is good enough”), self-adulating (“what a great artist I am”), or self-loathing (“this is no good”). We must embrace hard work, cultivate discipline, and joyfully accept the value of creative frustration—discovering the ability to work things through, no matter what the level of difficulty. In the words of Alfred Stieglitz: to grow more tolerant toward others, stricter with oneself.

Persistent Effort

Constance Hale, in Sin and Syntax, encourages writers to “be simple, but go deep.” She explains: “The exquisite ‘cutouts’ of Matisse and elegant line drawings of Picasso came late in long careers of painstaking work and wild experimentation. In writing as in painting, simplicity often follows considerable torment.”

Creativity Transforms Us

The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge, Rilke writes: Ah, poems amount to so little when you write them too early in your life. You ought to wait and gather sense and sweetness for a whole lifetime, and a long one if possible, and then, at the very end, you might perhaps be able to write ten good lines. For poems are not, as people think, simply emotions (one has emotions early enough)—they are experiences.

Real Understanding

When we realize the role of creative individuals as conduits for life itself, it cannot help but engender deep humility. We are nothing, a grain of sand; yet we are everything, the spark of divinity lives within us.

To explore, to challenge, to take risks, to try in spite of our limitations, to embrace the evolving process, to bear the glorious discomfort of not-knowing, to knowingly step into the unknown—these are the things a body likes, a soul strives for, and an artist or creative individual joyfully requires.

 

CREATIVE PRACTICE 

Questions

Tools and Exercises 

3 Crisis & Creative Frustration

Jacques Lusseyran, French writer and teacher, lost the use of both eyes in a schoolyard accident at the age of eight. In his autobiography, Let There Be Light, he relates the experience of overcoming the obstacles of his blindness and learning to see again, through the act of being attentive to inner and outer conditions. Lusseyran describes a momentous discovery made shortly after the injury. Though he had lost the sight of his eyes, he could still experience the pervasive illumination of light. “I found it in myself and what a miracle!—it was intact.” He realized that it was contingent upon his inner condition—his attention—and his emotional state. “There was only one way to see the inner light, and that was to love.”

Using resistance as a tool, embracing the difficult as well as the easy, learning to navigate skillfully through rapidly changing conditions: these constitute the path of the artist.

As an artist friend once told me, “Our real gold as artists comes from our wounds.”

Self Observation 

CREATIVE PRACTICE Questions 

In cultures both traditional and modern, in different ways, it is said that in healing ourselves, we heal the planet, and in healing the planet, we heal ourselves. In this respect, the world needs our inner work and creative efforts. The more deeply we delve into ourselves and our own unique circumstances in the creation of art, the stronger and more authentic our work becomes. Yet, the more deeply we penetrate through the masks that hide us from ourselves, the more universal the work becomes in its meaning.

4 Retreat & Withdraw 

 

There is no measuring with time, a year doesn’t matter, and ten years is nothing. Being an artist means: not numbering and counting, but ripening like a tree, which doesn’t force its sap, and standing confidently in the storms of spring, not afraid that afterward summer may not come. It does come. But it comes only to those who are patient … I learn it every day of my life, learn it with the pain I am grateful for: patience is everything!

 

CREATIVE PRACTICE Questions 

5 Epiphany & Insight 

Awakening to Sources 

The Crack Between Worlds 

Balance of Initiative and Receptivity 

The Wings of Feeling 

“The alarming fact is that any realization of depth carries a terrible burden: Those who are allowed to see are simultaneously saddled with the obligation to communicate that vision in no uncertain terms: that is the bargain. You were allowed to see the truth under the agreement that you would communicate it to others… And therefore, if you have seen, you simply must speak out. Speak with compassion, or speak out with angry wisdom, or speak out with skillful means, but speak out you must.” —Ken Wilber, One Taste

Becoming an Artist 

 

CREATIVE PRACTICE Questions 

Tools and Exercises 

Allow words and images to arise. Do not try to interpret them with your ordinary mind. Let them be. Let them act on you. Keep them insight in the back of your mind. Over time, observe how they relate to your life or your creative work. Be childlike. Learn to think in images and with symbols or metaphors. Remember looking at cloud shapes as a child? Remember the rich content of your imagination when young? What have you lost in growing up? Can you reawaken this essential form of knowing?

6 Discipline & Contemplation 

Humility and right action are inseparable at this stage. The accumulated knowledge and skill obtained through the preceding stages can now be employed with clear focus, grace, and detachment. If we remain mired in the ego’s persistent desire to dominate the process, the work will suffer—as will we—and it may not thrive to a natural fulfillment.

 

How do we achieve mastery of what writer Katherine Mansfield called the “terrific hard gardening” that this stage requires?

No matter how inspired our insights, unless manifested in the physical world our ideas remain intangible, invisible. Our work must exist in physical form if it is to communicate with others and evoke what we intend.

To study a craft is to study ourselves. In desiring the fullness of expression, we are, in reality, seeking inner wholeness. Something in me is called on: as a human being, I am invited to take part in my own formation.

The only man who adds to the spiritual wealth of humanity is the one who has the force to become what he is.”

Sustaining The Journey 

Good Work Habits

  1. Cultivating a sensitive awareness of one’s “body clock” and discovering one’s most effective working rhythms can lead to fruitful work habits that enliven the flow of creativity.
  2. The cultivation of discipline depends on the reconciliation of our conflicting impulses. We must feed the beast: our desires, our cravings, our ego. We give these things the room to have their say; otherwise, they will get in the way and assume a dominant role. For most of us, forced discipline doesn’t work. We cannot put an end to our restlessness and our desire to be doing something else. So, we might tell ourselves that if we write for several hours, or work in a concentrated manner in the studio each morning, we’ll treat ourselves to lunch, or ice cream, or whatever it is that we desire. My own strategy is to work hard in the morning and allow myself a swim at lunch. I then work hard again for several hours, and with great regularity treat myself to a late-afternoon cappuccino. We are what we are, and we must acknowledge and tolerate with compassion our idiosyncrasies, and even reward them by giving them room to breathe. In this respect, creativity can encourage recognition and deep sense of acceptance of oneself. We may find a new quality of empathy and compassion that we bring to ourselves and our own particular brand of behavior. Real change and transformation will never come through violence—through forcing ourselves, and whipping the “beast” into submission. It is only through slow, patient work governed by taking care of ourselves that we may work toward the discovery and expression of our highest and best nature.
  3. Effective working methods grow directly from the moment. The sheer enjoyment of the process, a sense of satisfaction, and just plain having fun are important. Make changes in your habits to keep things fresh. Vary your activities when the routine becomes dull and begins to feel like drudgery. Doing what feels good sounds elementary, but is not always something we allow ourselves.
  4. Discipline, in the highest sense of the word, means following a transformative practice. What is a discipline, or practice—and how does it help? What can serve to bring us back to ourselves, toward our most essential energies, and to a state of inner attentiveness? Krishna teaches Arjuna in the Bhavagad Gita: “If you want to be truly free, perform all actions as worship … It is better to do your own duty badly than to perfectly do another’s; you are safe from harm when you do what you should be doing.”
  5. Self-knowledge offers the deepest well of energy for disciplined follow-through and responsible completion. Recognize the worth and importance of what you genuinely have to offer. When we recognize our true mission, our real place in this intricately interconnected world, energy for proceeding, for doing what we do, comes literally flooding in to inform and enliven our efforts. This realization goes far beyond the mere development of self-esteem. This source of energy comes from seeing the whole, and perceiving our place in it; it grows from the profound realization that the world might not be the same without the role that we are called to assume. This is not ego or inflated self-importance, but the recognition of our essential nature and its great potential value to others.

 

CREATIVE PRACTICE Questions 

Tools and Exercises 

7 Responsibility & Release 

Our knowledge, skill, and insights must be passed on—to others, and eventually to future generations—if we wish to assume our place in the ongoing flow of life. This is true of artists in any sphere of activity.

Archetypal Roles 

  1. The Visionary
  1. The Midwife 
  1. The Wounded Healer 
  1. The Magician 
  1. The Seeker

Rainer Maria Rilke writes in Letters to a Young Poet about the seeking of confirmation of one’s creative work through external means: 

Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself: I celebrate myself and sing myself. And what I assume, you shall assume, For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you.

The I Ching again teaches us the proper attitude toward our work through the metaphor of water: “It flows on and on, and merely fills up all the places through which it flows; it does not shrink from any dangerous spot nor from any plunge, and nothing can make it lose its own essential nature. It remains true to itself under all conditions… The water reaches its goal by flowing continually.”

Part Two Wayfinding: Guiding Principles of the Creative Impulse

8 The First Principle: Creative Courage 

We must replace fear and chauvinism, hate, timidity, and apathy, which flow in our national spinal column, with courage, sensitivity, perseverance, and, I even dare say, “love.” And by “love” I mean that condition in the human spirit is so profound it encourages us to develop courage. It is said that courage is the most important of all the virtues because without courage you can’t practice any other virtue with consistency. —Maya Angelou, Even the Stars Look Lonesome

Creative courage, then, implies only that we risk our easy answers and comfortable patterns for the sake of discovery.

  1. Belief in Oneself
  1. Unbending Intent 
  1. Opening to the Mystery 

 

True courage aligns us between intent and surrender.

  1. Striving to Live Within
  1. Cultivating Compassion 

 

9 The Second Principle: Right Place, Right Time

 

The question is: What works for you? What conditions, challenges, and influences do you need, that brings you closer to an intimate relationship with the creative impulse? Certain features of our lifestyles make possible our artistic strivings and serve to awaken our creativity.

 

10 The Third Principle: Deepening Connections

ART AND SPIRITUAL PRACTICE 

  1. A Way of Growth 
  1. The Way of Balance 

 

  1. The Search for Self 
  1. A Way of Devotion 

 

In our most profound moments—of beauty and radiance, of great pain or trauma, of love and awakening, of seeing and feeling the sublime—we also sense our mortality. Everything that is born must die. All the manifestations of life that we are privileged to experience are temporal and mortal and will pass from this earth. The Greeks have given us a word for this: pathos, which represents the duality present in rare moments of awareness, when joy is intertwined with sadness, and hope is tempered by reality.

 

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