I mentioned the other day how I begin projects by investing my time in sustained script reading, trying to understand the written word and its intentions first.
It's a process that doesn't happen at a computer. I don't read PDFs on screen. Any screen. I actually read hard copy, printed to paper I hold in my hands.
I read and study it in our living room, on our balcony, or down by the lake. I do that in order to allow my brain to focus only on the words and their meaning.
It's a part of my creative process that has to be walled off from other parts. The process simply works better that way.
Now, if you're one of those people who can get results across all aspects of your job at the same location... good on ya.
But if it's a struggle, or if you're wondering if there's a better way...
Lemme start by pointing out that our brains are sensitive to physical place. It can actually create a kind of mental rut that, if you do admin in your office most of the time, for example... your brain gets kind of optimized for it in that place. Which can make it challenging to attempt mental tasks of different natures.
Like considering and juxtaposing and iterating possibilities.
You might find your efforts sluggish in a way. Which can be frustrating. Which may be cause to believe you need to concentrate harder.
For the blank canvas part of the creative process, the very first second of it, you don't need to focus more...
You need your thoughts to meander inside your conscious and subconscious brain. You need your thoughts to do some magic in there. Which isn't about focus.
A friend of mine is a magnificent songwriter who always starts with the music. Then, when it comes time to conjure the lyrics, he tries to do that in the studio as well. Right where he's been creating the music on his guitar.
Only that process doesn’t work. And no lyrics are forthcoming from his brain.
So we talked about that for a bit. We talked about when it's time to work on lyrics, hang up the guitar, leave the studio and go to what's gonna be his writing place... and begin the process of writing. See what happens. Create both a mental and physical space that separates music writing from lyric writing. I told him to record a rough track of the music for playback in the writing space. All of which I thought was great advice, if I do say so myself.
Yeah. It didn’t work. As in following my advice produced no better results than if he remained in his studio strumming his guitar trying to force lyrics out of his head.
Later, we were off on a random conversation about meditation and how my friend had taken it up.
So I tell my friend that when it comes time to write lyrics, hang up the guitar and go to wherever it is he does meditation. And meditate.
Words began to flow in that mental space of meditation. Seriously flow.
And a reminder that the key that unlocks productive creativity is different by degrees for all of us. The trick is to know where you are in the creative process and engage the kind of experience necessary to that process.
So if diffuse thinking is required and you’re not allowing for that in your creative space... then that is sufficient explanation for why whatever it is you need to flow doesn’t flow.