Foreign.
Speaker ALet's talk about creative goals.
Speaker ANow, I'm not talking about the kind that live in a spreadsheet that you never look at and not the kind that make you feel guilty when you miss a day.
Speaker AI mean, the kind of goals that actually help you keep on creating without crushing the joy that made you start in the first place.
Speaker ABecause somewhere along the way, a lot of artists turn their passions into pressure.
Speaker AHey, friends, this is Timothy Chemo Brian, your head instigator for Create Art podcast, where I bring my over 30 years of experience in the arts and education world to help you tame your inner critic and create more than you consume.
Speaker ASo we're continuing on with the new Artist Compass series.
Speaker AWe've got probably one more episode to go on that, and today we're talking about setting your creative goals.
Speaker ANow, this is something that every creative struggles with.
Speaker ASetting those goals without killing the joy of it in the feeling.
Speaker AYou start with inspiration, then somewhere along the line, that checklist takes over.
Speaker AThat spark fades.
Speaker ASo how do we stay motivated without turning your art into.
Speaker AInto a job description?
Speaker AI mean, I don't know about you, but for me, I already have a day job and I have a family, so I don't want my art to turn into that.
Speaker AHow this all starts off with is just redefining what success means to you.
Speaker AYou don't need to hit every milestone to grow.
Speaker AYou just need to show up, stay curious, and let your goals guide you, not control you.
Speaker ARemember, joy is not the opposite of discipline.
Speaker AIt's the reason why discipline works.
Speaker AAll right, so let's start off with redefining what success looks like.
Speaker ABasically, you want to shift from outcome based success.
Speaker AAm I selling it to process based success, such as, hey, did I show up today and create something today?
Speaker AIt's going to re you.
Speaker AYou have to trust that it's going to reach your audience.
Speaker ATrust yourself, trust your practice.
Speaker AIt's going to reach somebody.
Speaker AIt's going to sell somewhere.
Speaker AThe big thing is, are you showing up each and every day for your creativity or for when you have your sessions?
Speaker AFor me, I usually have my sessions late at night when I put the kids to bed, or on the weekends when they're out doing whatever that they're doing.
Speaker ASometimes Saturday night, sometimes Sunday morning.
Speaker ABut I asked myself, did I show up?
Speaker ADid I really put in the reps to go ahead and be creative and remind yourself that creative growth isn't always linear, it's not always up and to the right.
Speaker ASometimes it's a roller coaster.
Speaker ASometimes you're up.
Speaker ASometimes you're down just with what's going on in your life, with how you're feeling.
Speaker AAnd don't beat yourself up about that.
Speaker AIt's okay.
Speaker AYou have a life.
Speaker AYou have a life outside of work, outside of family, outside of your creativity.
Speaker AAnd sometimes stuff gets really messy and that's okay.
Speaker ABut when it's time to show up, make sure that you're showing up.
Speaker AAnd always remember, you want to celebrate your progress.
Speaker AIf you're getting better at something, celebrate that it's not about perfection.
Speaker AYou're not.
Speaker AI'm going to let you in on a little secret, okay?
Speaker ADon't tell anybody this.
Speaker AIt's not ever going to be perfect.
Speaker AIt's not ever going to be fully done, fully realized.
Speaker AIt's not going to happen.
Speaker ABut you may surprise yourself with what you can put out.
Speaker ASo don't let that perfection influence you, impact you, myself, Lately, the past, I don't know, about a month, month and a half, I've been doing acrylic painting and I've been following somebody.
Speaker AUnfortunately, they passed away back in 2024.
Speaker ABut their videos are up online.
Speaker AIt's actually, I'll let you in on it.
Speaker AThe artist Sherpa, and I've been doing some paintings with that.
Speaker AThey're not perfect.
Speaker AShe shows me how to do what she's doing and she's very forgiving.
Speaker AShe, she's, hey, it's not going to look exactly like this, but she wants to celebrate, or she wanted to celebrate what people who were viewing her videos were doing.
Speaker ASo we want to celebrate progress, not perfection.
Speaker AIf I was to wait for perfection, I wouldn't have sent these paintings out to friends and family.
Speaker AI would have still be working on the very first painting, going, oh my God, I did it wrong.
Speaker AOr I got this line messed up, or I didn't get this color just right.
Speaker AThat's perfection I'm already good with.
Speaker AHey, I paint like a four year old on crack, but I'm getting better.
Speaker ASo next week I'll paint like a 5 year old on crack and then a 6 year old on acid and a 7 year old on PCP.
Speaker AWhatever it is, celebrate the progression, not the perfection.
Speaker ASo next up, we're going to be talking about creating a flexible framework.
Speaker ANow, you may have set this up in a spreadsheet or some project management software.
Speaker AAnd you've got hard deadlines and checkpoints where this has to be done by this date in time.
Speaker AHere's the thing.
Speaker AReplace that with creative checkpoints, review them and adjust them as you go, am I growing in this?
Speaker AAm I getting better at this?
Speaker ADo I need to go back in time or in my process and adjust something there?
Speaker ASo those rigid deadlines, what are they there for?
Speaker AI mean, unless somebody is paying you ahead of time for something to be done in a week or two, and I have my personal business where I do have that, where I do have some rigid timelines that I need to have stuff done by.
Speaker ABut when I'm doing my creativity, when I'm doing my creative stuff, I just have checkpoints.
Speaker AAm I feeling good about this?
Speaker AIs this what I want to do?
Speaker AAnd I can adjust it as I go.
Speaker AIt can be a little murky, and that's okay.
Speaker AAllow that spontaneity within whatever structure you choose to use.
Speaker AAllow that spontaneity to happen.
Speaker ASo maybe you're working on a painting and you're like, what?
Speaker AI feel like writing great.
Speaker AOr I feel like doing some music now this painting is really inspiring some music in me.
Speaker AOr, you know what?
Speaker AI'm hitting a block here.
Speaker AI'm hitting a brick wall here.
Speaker AI'm going to do something else that's creative and do that instead for a little while.
Speaker AGo ahead, do that.
Speaker AYou may.
Speaker AA lot of times we can solve these problems unconsciously, so we need to be doing something else to allow our subconscious to fix what we want to have fixed.
Speaker ASo distract yourself with something else, preferably something creative.
Speaker ABut, you know, maybe it's.
Speaker AYou go for a walk and listen to a podcast.
Speaker AMaybe you go for a walk and listen to this podcast is specifically this episode.
Speaker AWhatever it is, go do that.
Speaker AAnd think of your goals as a map, not a prison.
Speaker AOkay, we're going to go from point A to point B. I don't know how we're going to get there, but sometimes we're going to circle around point B for a while until we're happy, and then we'll go to point B.
Speaker AIt's a map.
Speaker AIt's not.
Speaker AIt's not.
Speaker ALike back in the day, we used to have MapQuest and.
Speaker AOr we used to have the paper maps.
Speaker AI remember those days.
Speaker AOr you have an app on your phone that will lead you to where you want to go.
Speaker AAnd it's going to get you either with the least amount of gas or least amount of traffic or whatever it is.
Speaker AHave some fun.
Speaker AHave some fun with whatever your goal is.
Speaker AIt's just.
Speaker AIt's a map without any roadways in there, without any traffic.
Speaker AIt's just a map.
Speaker AHere's point A.
Speaker AHere's point B, however you want to get there, have fun with it.
Speaker AHere's a river that's right there.
Speaker AHere's a mountain that's right there.
Speaker AYou might have to climb the mountain to get over to point B, but it's a map.
Speaker AIt's not set in stone.
Speaker AIt's not to handcuff you there.
Speaker AIt's just to go, hey, I want to get from here to there.
Speaker AHowever you do it, that's how you do it.
Speaker ABe flexible with your frameworks.
Speaker ASo my third point is aligning your goals with your why.
Speaker AIn podcasting, we talk about what is your why all the time and always focusing on what that why is.
Speaker ASame thing with your art.
Speaker ASame thing with your painting, your writing, your sculpture, your dance, whatever it is, whatever you're doing.
Speaker AWhy am I creating this and who is it for that is going to allow you to be flexible?
Speaker ABecause over time that may change.
Speaker AYou may be working on a project and you have the perfect idea who it's for, and then you run into somebody else and you're like, no, actually this is for this person over here that I didn't know like two weeks ago, and I'm creating this and it's for them.
Speaker ASo I need to change a few things up.
Speaker ASo align those goals with your why you want to use purpose driven goals that are feeling lightable, lighter and more sustainable and lightable too.
Speaker ABut the these purpose driven goals, not these hard deadlines and not point A to point B, straight line kind of stuff.
Speaker ABut why we're doing it and who is it for that's going to feel lighter and you'll be able to do it more often?
Speaker AI think that's one thing that we're all trying to do.
Speaker AWhen you're feeling burnt out and when doubt is creeping in, go back to your why.
Speaker AWhy are you doing this?
Speaker AIs it to cause change in the world?
Speaker AIs it to make a living?
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker ABut whatever your why is, revisit that and that will be your North Star to guide you to where you need to go.
Speaker ANow we're going to go to the fourth point, which is projecting, protecting, not projecting.
Speaker AProtect the joy of play.
Speaker AHere's the thing.
Speaker AYou want to set up a no pressure, creative space for yourself.
Speaker AMaybe it's a sketchbook.
Speaker AMaybe you have a keyboard that you just pounded on.
Speaker AYou do a word vomit or a word salad and you just, this is stuff that nobody's ever gonna see.
Speaker AI mean, look behind me.
Speaker AFor those of you that are listening only to the audio, I'm Sorry.
Speaker AIf you're watching the video, I've got some stuff that is just.
Speaker AJust for fun.
Speaker AJust like, I wanted to do this and see what happened.
Speaker AAnd I've talked about some of my pieces that I've done before.
Speaker ASo my collage, which I don't know what I'm doing with the collage, it just looked right to me.
Speaker APlay around.
Speaker AThere's going to be some stuff that you don't show anybody.
Speaker AAnd it's okay.
Speaker AIt's for you.
Speaker AIt's an experiment.
Speaker AAnd with that, there's no pressure on you.
Speaker AYou can build your mastery of whatever project that you're doing.
Speaker AAnd it reminds you of why you started.
Speaker AThe big thing here is let joy, the joy of creating, be part of your process.
Speaker AMake it integral, not just, hey, if I sell it for a million dollars at the end.
Speaker AThat's not the goal.
Speaker AThat's not the goal.
Speaker AYou want to have fun with it because it can get frustrating.
Speaker AIt can get very frustrating.
Speaker AEspecially if you hear a lot of crickets and no one's buying your work or asking you about your work.
Speaker AWork that can get really frustrating after a while.
Speaker ASo just have fun with it.
Speaker AThat's the big thing.
Speaker AEverybody that I've read that talks about creativity always comes back to the fun of it.
Speaker AAnd really creating stuff is a lot of fun.
Speaker AEven if you're like me and you paint like a four year old on crack, it's fun, I enjoy it.
Speaker AIf people like it, great.
Speaker AIf people don't, that's fine.
Speaker ABut I'm going to keep on doing it because it brings me peace.
Speaker AThat's kind of like watching Bob Ross on pbs.
Speaker AJust you see how much fun he's having with it.
Speaker AAnd you're like, man, I want to do that.
Speaker AFor me, that's what I do with my paintings.
Speaker AI want to do that.
Speaker AI want to have fun with it.
Speaker AIf it looks like what he did, great.
Speaker ABut I'm just here for the quiet, soothing nature of it, and that helps me out tremendously.
Speaker AAll right, so this is our last point, and that's build reflection into your routine.
Speaker AAnd I'm not saying put a mirror up.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker AYou can put a mirror up if you want to.
Speaker AI'm not gonna, I'm not gonna come and bite your fingers off, but look at what you've done.
Speaker AMy earliest paintings, I don't know where they are.
Speaker AThey're gone.
Speaker AThey're gone.
Speaker ABut I do have some paintings that are a little bit old.
Speaker AThere is one that is just off to the side here.
Speaker AYou can't see it.
Speaker AIt's off camera, but it's a painting of a brick wall, but with different colors and different textures going on with it.
Speaker AIt's fine.
Speaker AIt's great.
Speaker AI have it up on my wall.
Speaker AI look at it from time to time, and I'm like, okay, cool.
Speaker AThat's one of my earlier pieces.
Speaker AFor those of you that are watching the video off to the back here, right about.
Speaker AYeah, that guy right there.
Speaker ABasically, it's a big black X with some white and some red around it.
Speaker AAnd that's one of my earlier paintings.
Speaker AI've got some pencil drawings and some color pencil things going on in the background here too.
Speaker AAnd so if you're listening to the audio, get on my.
Speaker AGet on my YouTube page.
Speaker AAnd that way you can be in on the joke as well.
Speaker ABut schedule some time to take a look at it.
Speaker AI do that with my writing.
Speaker AI do that with my poetry.
Speaker ASometimes I look at my earliest stuff, which I actually do have, and I scratch my head and I go, oh, my God, that's horrendous.
Speaker ABut then I look and see what I'm writing now, and I'm like, okay, all right.
Speaker AThere's some progress here.
Speaker AYou know, at that time, I was writing about this kind of stuff.
Speaker ANow my life has changed so much.
Speaker AI'm writing about this kind of stuff.
Speaker AThat reflection re energizes you, and it shows you the progress, and you're like, okay, I'm doing better.
Speaker AAnd it'll go back into your.
Speaker AWhy are you doing it?
Speaker AAnd I'm developing a mastery of this craft, of this art form.
Speaker AIt makes you feel good about yourself.
Speaker AThere's nothing wrong with feeling good about what you're doing.
Speaker AYou can use journaling if you want to journal about what you're doing and saying, hey, I started doing watercolors, which soon will happen, and it looked like mud.
Speaker AAnd then two, three, four, five years down the road, you're writing in your journal.
Speaker AWow.
Speaker AI mean, I had 50 people bidding on this piece.
Speaker AThat would be great.
Speaker ALook how far I've come.
Speaker AOr I'm doing a show at a gallery because people really enjoy what I'm doing.
Speaker AYou can do that with journaling.
Speaker AMaybe some voice memos just to capture the insights and to revisit what you have learned in the process.
Speaker AThat's an art form all into itself, and that's an art form that I'm not great at, but I'm working on that, and I am a work in progress.
Speaker AAll right, I need to get back on with my day.
Speaker AI'm going to let you get back on with your day.
Speaker AI want to thank you first and foremost for either watching on the YouTube channel or listening to this on your app of choice.
Speaker AAnd if today's talk inspired you, I'm going to challenge you.
Speaker ATake five minutes to write down one creative goal and beside that goal, one way to keep it fun.
Speaker AThat's going to be your compass for your next project.
Speaker AAnd just go ahead and do that.
Speaker AIf you want to share with me, you can email me.
Speaker ATimothy Create art podcast dot com.
Speaker ABe happy to read those and if you'd like to be on the show or if you have critiques of the show, send it to my email address.
Speaker AI'd love to hear from you.
Speaker ASometimes it gets lonely out here just hearing crickets.
Speaker ASo definitely let me know what you like about the show, what you don't like about the show, what you want to see more of, what you want to see less of.
Speaker AI'm here to help you be the best artist that you can be.
Speaker AShare it with a friend.
Speaker AMaybe you're all good to go with this, but a friend that needs to hear this.
Speaker AMaybe you don't have the words for it or you can't articulate it like I can articulate it.
Speaker AShare this episode with them.
Speaker AI'm not gonna.
Speaker AIt's not gonna hurt my feelings.
Speaker APlease do.
Speaker AI totally am for that.
Speaker ASpeaking about sharing this show, I have another show called Find a Podcast about.
Speaker AYou can get it on that one at Find a Podcast about xyz and that's where I help my listeners over there.
Speaker AFind the next binge worthy podcast and outsmart the algorithm.
Speaker ACheck it out.
Speaker AAnd I alluded to this a little bit earlier, but I do.
Speaker AI have started up my own personal business.
Speaker AIt's called TKB Podcast Studio.
Speaker AYou can find it at tkb podcast studio.com and that's where I help my clients lead through the noise with quiet professionalism.
Speaker AHelp people set up their podcasts.
Speaker ACheck out my portfolio there.
Speaker AReach out to me.
Speaker ALet's see what we can do together.
Speaker ABe happy to help you out with your podcast ideas.
Speaker AAll right, that's it for this.
Speaker AThis episode.
Speaker AJust want to let you that want you to go out there and create more than you consume.
Speaker ATeam your inner critic, you don't need it.
Speaker AYour inner critic is probably the one that's saying, oh, you got to get this done here, there and everywhere.
Speaker AThrow out the schedule, okay?
Speaker AJust throw it out and go have fun with your art.
Speaker AGo out there and make some art for somebody you love yourself.
Speaker AI'll talk to you next time, Sam.