What I Learned as a Hobby Artist This Year
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Hi Reader,
Every year between Christmas and New Year I take a few quiet days to slow down.
No deadlines.
No pressure.
Just time to breathe and notice what the year has really taught me.
This past year surprised me in ways I didn't see coming.
Quick Story
For a long time my creative years looked the same.
I would start with big hopes, push hard, lose momentum and then wonder why nothing felt different.
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Reflective Structure
Space
It took me a while to see that the trouble wasn't lack of talent or motivation.
The real issue was that I wasn't giving myself space to shape my art life with intention.
When every year becomes a repeat of the last, it's easy to feel stuck.
And when we're stuck, even small creative tasks start to feel heavy.
Reflection
I realized that without reflection and a bit of structure, my ideas blurred together.
My creativity needed room to shift, settle and grow.
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Solution
Seasons
This year I organized my creativity by the seasons.
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- Winter became a time for planning.
- Spring for trying new things.
- Summer for expression.
- Autumn for steady work and family moments.
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Working in ninety-day blocks helped me move with my energy instead of against it.
Showing Up
I also learned that showing up matters more than waiting for inspiration.
A sketch, a doodle or a few lines of writing kept me connected even on tired days.
Consistency softened the pressure and allowed ideas to grow in their own time.
Breathe
And the biggest shift came from letting my work breathe.
When I allowed ideas to rest for a few days, they came back clearer and more grounded.
Slowing down didn't take away from my art.
It strengthened it.
Read More
If you'd like to read my full reflection, you can find it on my site today.
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Over to You
How Does Your Creativity Feel?
Hit reply and tell me how your creativity has been feeling lately.
Has this year felt steady, scattered or somewhere in between?