Creating a Voice
This week I started reading materials from an artist who’s worked I’ve admired for nearly a decade. She recently took a hiatus to spend more time with her family and invest in training. Nirrimi Firebrace spent two years to create a creative’s course called the Daily Map. I recommend checking it out and at least reading the first few sections. She inspired me to pursue photography as a creative medium back when I struggled to express myself and my ideas.
In the course, she shares many lessons that she’s learned living as a writer and photographer that resonated with me. So today, I wanted to talk about being true to yourself if identified as being creative.
From all the moments I can recall growing up, it was never easy wanting to pursue or practice art. I can recount feeling so much hatred towards my projects and then myself— no matter the medium I decided to pursue, it didn’t matter if it was poetry, photography, art, or writings. I’d also always post and share in public and personal spaces... because that was a reason. I wanted to create.
I’d also look at my post later, feel shame and anxiety, and then I would hide or delete any project that I didn’t enjoy at that moment. It was hard for me to face that duality. I’d avoid it by not creating anything.
On the one hand, I felt this intrinsic interest to create. And it was nice to imagine that people would resonate and enjoy whatever creative project I happened to work. But I couldn’t deal with feeling that my work wasn’t good enough and at the end of the day, I would hate myself.
When I think back on it today, 7 or 8 years later, I know I never gave myself a fair assessment.
And for someone who feels that way or has that experience, it can be isolating when you can’t find the reasons why. It can be challenging to find words even to describe it. I think at that time in my life I didn’t know other people had similar experiences. So today I thought it’d be good to share something I found from Ira Glass, who created This American Life :
And it’s kind of cheesy, but I’ll say it. When I was shutting down my work, I was putting myself down and running away from who I am. I believe you can’t embrace yourself if you can’t acknowledge creating as a strength, interest, and talent. Even when I wasn’t picking up a camera and doing shoots or working traditional creative projects, I was bringing: to the table, to my conversations, and my strict 9->5 jobs— ideas that only I could contribute. My voice is creative; the things that I enjoy and nerd out about are creative. I wish that in the past, I was more faithful to myself about that.
There’s this section called Passion from Nirrimi’s Daily Map that explains creativity and how it’s a calling. Here’s a snippet of some paragraphs from that section that I enjoyed:
Lately, I’ve been trying to play to my strengths and endorse the unique things I bring to the table. When I started this journey about 4-5 months ago, I didn’t initially consider the weight of creativity and how it impacts my day to day when I share, speak, and involve myself in projects. I’m thinking that a great way to start 2020 is to encourage my voice and understand where it comes from, knowing that it has many facets, including stories and motivations.