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19 Feb 2004 @ 10:23, by Flemming Funch
Carl Rogers, in an essay from "On becoming a person", titled "To Be That Self Which One Truly Is". Via The Obvious and Older and Growing.Watching my clients, I have come to a much better understanding of creative people. El Greco, for example, must have realised as he looked at some of his early work, that "good artists do not paint like that." But somehow he trusted his own experiencing of life, the process of himself, sufficiently that he could go on expressing his own unique perceptions. It was as though he could say, "Good artists do not paint like this, but I paint like this." Or to move to another field, Ernest Hemingway was surely aware that "good writers do not write like this." But fortunately he move toward being Hemingway, being himself, rather than toward some one else’s conception of a good writer. Einstein seems to have been unusually oblivious to the fact that good physicists did not think his kind of thoughts. Rather than drawing back because of his inadequate academic preparation in physics, he simply moved toward being Einstein, toward thinking his own thoughts, toward being as truly and deeply himself as he could. This is not a phenomenon which occurs only in the artist or the genius. Time and again in my clients, I have seen simple people become significant and creative in their own spheres, as they have developed more trust of the processes going on within themselves, and have dared to feel their own feelings, live by values which they discover within, and express themselves in their own unique ways. Great angle on things. If you only try to do what a good artist or a good writer or a good *something* does, you might well become good, but you probably won't become great, and you won't end up doing what you particularly are here to do. Rather it is about trusting your own process and finding what particularly it is that YOU do, and do that the very best you can.
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Category: Ideas, Creativity
6 comments
19 Feb 2004 @ 10:52 by Frank Patrick @24.225.163.105 : Best Practices and Benchmarking
Nice piece. Totally in line with what I've written about the use of benchmarking and best practices in business. They too often allow one to play "catch-up" but don't really help in developing a competitive leadership role.
19 Feb 2004 @ 13:52 by Jon Husband @24.87.30.128 : Creating Your self
Ditto to Frank's comment. And it's astonishing at times to me that there continues to be such a drive to standardize, rather than the "both/and/but" of standardizing what is best to standardize whilst at the same time allowing for, accounting for, paying for creative space and time ... as an integral and fundamental part of what all organizations do - they being made up of creative people.
20 Feb 2004 @ 02:50 by shawa : Translation
Going to translate that GREAT text into Spanish!!! :-D Wow.
20 Feb 2004 @ 09:33 by Alka @203.122.61.30 : Creative People
With standardizing and categorizing people top it with stereotyping!All this start from early childhood days!Its still a wonder that this world still "create" creative persons! :-)
20 Feb 2004 @ 14:33 by amara : Who is "they" anyway?
And when we try to be what we "should" be, that's only our own perception of what Is, yes? I do catch myself trying to be a "real" potter sometimes. Fortunately, I'm self taught and so don't have much of an idea what that is! So, I end up (on a good day) coming around to myself anyway. Thanks, Ming, for the reminder. After all, who else is going to be me? I might as well. Cheers!
1 Mar 2004 @ 08:55 by N KHARBACH @194.83.25.10 : FORGET THE PAIN IN VR
I THINK THIS METHOD (VR) SHOULD BE OFFERED TO WOMEN IN LABOUR AS A PAIN CONTROL.
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