Monday, April 27, 2020
Client Show Tell Starving Artist Or Satiated Creator
Client Show Tell Starving Artist Or Satiated Creator Ask For What You Want by NayArts Iâm on vacation early this week, my clients are doing some Show Tell! Its time now to hear from Juliana Finch, a glorious (yes, glorious) singer/songwriter whose music will make you melt (yes, melt). If you like what you hear, help her make her new album ( have her play in your home! yes, really!) by being a backer. I became one already. Yes, the music s that glorious. I wasnt kidding. When I first discovered Michelles coaching practice and blog, I had one of those Aha! moments that Oprah talks about. Here was someone who was telling people that it is not only totally ok to be a creative person out in the world, but that your creativity is possibly integral to your well-being and can help you thrive! That idea is almost my religion, so it was immediately clear that Michelle was my kinda gal. For the past couple of weeks, Iâve been getting some excellent group coaching with Michelle and it has helped me push past a plateau Iâd reached regarding the business side of my creative work. For most artists I know, the terms âbusinessâ and âmoneyâ might as well be four-letter words. Our creative work is a labor of love, so mixing it with money can feel dirty. Weâre all familiar with the idea of the starving artist, right? Somehow, weâve gotten the idea that a real artist has to be suffering and toiling in obscurity. If youâre financially secure and marketable, it must mean that youâre a sell-out. I hate to burst your bubble, but that idea is a load of hooey. Does any of this sound familiar to you? âI could audition for that part, but there are hundreds of people trying out, so my chances arenât good.â âI know Iâve been playing this open mic for a couple of years, but everyone has to pay their dues.â âIf I were good enough to be a professional, I would have been discovered by now. â For me, clinging to the starving artist persona did nothing but give me permission to shrink from the world, not try my hardest, and put my art on the backburner. It was comfortable, it was easy. It was a free pass to give up. A couple of years ago, I finally got fed up with it and decided that I would like to be a satiated creator instead of a starving artist. For me, that looks like this: ⢠I decided that my work was good enough for people to pay for. When I gave value to my own work, other people gave more value to it, also. This psychological hump was the first thing I had to get over before I could move forward. Then⦠⢠I decided to stop playing free shows. When I do a free show these days, itâs because it meets some very specific personal requirements Iâve set up. Believe me, this was a scary move. I had been playing whatever shows I could get for a long time, and many of those were in coffee shops or restaurants where no one was listening anywayâ¦but Iâd heard for years that young musicians have to âpay duesâ and thatâs what I thought I was doing. You know what else young musicians have to pay? Bills. ⢠I decided to invest a significant amount of money in putting together a full-length,professional album. I was done waiting for a record label to âdiscoverâ me and give me permission to be a singer/songwriter. I was tired of telling people at shows that, âGee, Iâm sorry, I donât have another CD yet. Iâm an independent musician so I donât have a label to pay for things and⦠â You know what happened when I made those three changes? I made more money in one year playing music than I had made in the previous five years of playing combined. When I told one venue that I wasnât able to do their free Wednesday night shows anymore, they offered me a paying Saturday night slot instead. I had finally started treating myself like a professional, and others took the cue from me. I know it can be terrifying. I know that there is a part of you saying you arenât good enough, and who are you to expect other people to pay you for this thing you would do for free anyway. But I also know that what you do can touch people in unexpected ways; that you can improve lives by your art, even if you never meet the person whose day/week/month you changed; and that by choosing to not to starve, you can feed the world with your creative energy. ************************************************************************************************************* Delicious Discounts Great Giveaways for When I Grow Up Readers! Through July 24th: enter to win a custom scrapbook from Tara Sroka. Through Aug 31st: get a $25 discount for any $250 purchase from Tara Sroka. As Gwen Stefani would say, What You Waiting For? Get Danielle LaPorteâs Nuggets of Genius in your own home, on your own time. The Digital Firestarter Sessions from my âcult leaderâ have launched! Whatâs your Joy Equation? Find out with Molly Hoyneâs Pay-What-You-Can-Afford Program!
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