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Suleika Jaouad's avatar

Hello friends! There are many beautiful comments here about both being creatively discouraged as a child and battling the internal critic. I wanted to share two prompts from the archives that came to mind. Here they are:

42. Creative Injuries – Stacie Orrico - https://www.theisolationjournals.com/explore/prompt42-creative-injuries

96. Drawing in the Margins – Anne Francey - https://www.theisolationjournals.com/explore/prompt96-drawing-in-the-margins

Both of these prompts have been deeply meaningful for my creative practice. I hope they help anyone who hasn't seen them (or needs the reminder). ❤️❤️❤️

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Eva Antczak-Hudzieczek's avatar

Ever since I was a little girl, I loved painting. Watercolours, color pencils, chalks - my favourites were wax crayons. I loved their smell and the bright colors. But since my parents and teachers discovered musical talent in me, I moved from doing things for fun to a systematic after-school music education. The older I was getting, the rarely I would take my colors or anything else and just create out of pure pleasure. I remember very vividly, when my mom saw me one time painting and said "well, it's clear you have a talent for music, right?" I laughed it off, but I felt discouraged and hurt. Fast forward to today, my now husband, who's professional visual artist, is my biggest supporter. When I shared with him, that "I can't paint" he told me "well, that's impossible - just grab the colours and let it all out." He taught me that I don't have to strive for perfection, that I don't have to be afraid of mistakes. It's all fun and I can actually ENJOY it without fearing that someone might judge me. The most important thing is the entertainment part, the process, not necessarily the result. And so, from time to time, we create together and we even had a small joint exhibition last fall :) something that I would never dream of and never aspired to.

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