February 18, 2020

Making time for art

It’s funny, no one ever asks me how I find the time to brush my teeth or put pants on before I leave the house every day. The question I always get is, how do you find the time to write?

Creating stuff (in my case, writing stories or drawing pictures) seems to be an ‘optional’ activity in the way we think about the world. It has to come after all the boring stuff. Work, commuting, cooking dinner, cleaning the house, bingeing Netflix, catching up on social media. After all, art (and self-expression) is a luxury, isn’t it? And I will admit, that there’s privilege baked into my life, but the people who are asking me about how I find the time to write aren’t the underprivileged, or historically-discriminated groups. That’s a whole different problem.

When the commitment to write or draw becomes a non-negotiable automatic activity, like brushing teeth or wearing pants when I’m in public, it’s no longer about finding time to write, because it’s already there.

Other observations
January 7, 2025

Every drawing is a raffle ticket

Until I’ve put an idea on a page, it’s nothing more than an idea – something that’s difficult to see, hold, and connect with.

December 31, 2024

A conversation with a pencil

If a pencil could talk, what would it say to you? Nothing, I suspect, if you don’t use it.

December 24, 2024

I believe in you

Are there any set of words that one human can say to another that have a more profound effect than these?

December 17, 2024

A siren’s song

Social media is a siren’s song – of scale, of connection, of ‘monetisation’, of a valuable way to spend time. Might there be a better way?

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