This Psychology Today article by Chris Guillebeau brings to mind things of habit and energy and decision-making that I’ve been reading and writing about this semester. It’s entitled “Reducing Decisions to Focus Better” and starts off with part of a letter to artists from Robert Genn:
Choreographer Twyla Tharp’s Creative Habit, describes her morning routine of rising early and going through the same morning rituals; same coffee, same bun. She puts on the same leotards, goes down the same elevator to the same street corner, puts her arm up in the air and gets into the first cab that comes along.
By the time she gets to the studio she has made no significant decisions. Stepping out onto the dance floor, her dancers await. It’s eight in the morning and her first decision is yet to come. It will be a creative one.
We painters also need to save our decision-making for things of importance. “Don’t,” as they say, “sweat the small stuff.” I figure an average 11″ x 14″ uses up several hundred thousand decisions. Compound that over a day of painting and it’s in the millions. Even the small decisions in a painting, some of them so micro and seemingly insignificant, are the building blocks of what we are to become.
(emphasis mine)
Two responses: This makes so much sense. / Why I am I so bad at it? Continue reading “Thoughts on Habits (Part Two)” →