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“You can’t use up creativity. The more you use, the more you have.” —Maya Angelou
Earlier this summer, I arrived late one day to the podcast studio, laying on the floor in lieu of actually recording anything. Should I take that as a sign to reduce my creative output?
Not necessarily.
Aside from big one-off projects like writing a book, where I pour incredible time and attention to detail into (that I tackle every five years or so), I seem to do better with ongoing creative work by sticking to a stretch-worthy production schedule. These days I’m running a Delightfully Tiny media company that produces the following on a monthly basis:
By stretching myself to show up in these ways, I have discovered that there’s not always an inverse relationship between consistency and quality—at least for me.
Aim for consistency even over quality (knowing that “babysitting the work” doesn’t always help anyway), and permission to keep publishing even through energetic highs and lows.
Look back at your creative history: do you do better work with more constraints or fewer? What’s your sweet spot? There is no right answer. Bonus: Put a team and/or resources in place to help bolster accountability, take responsibility off your shoulders, and that raises the stakes (in a good way) of missing a deadline.
✍️ Check out Jenny’s personal business essays on Substack, Rolling in D🤦🏻♀️h
📝 Check out full show notes and share with friends: https://itsfreetime.com/episodes/230
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Jenny Blake4.9
4949 ratings
“You can’t use up creativity. The more you use, the more you have.” —Maya Angelou
Earlier this summer, I arrived late one day to the podcast studio, laying on the floor in lieu of actually recording anything. Should I take that as a sign to reduce my creative output?
Not necessarily.
Aside from big one-off projects like writing a book, where I pour incredible time and attention to detail into (that I tackle every five years or so), I seem to do better with ongoing creative work by sticking to a stretch-worthy production schedule. These days I’m running a Delightfully Tiny media company that produces the following on a monthly basis:
By stretching myself to show up in these ways, I have discovered that there’s not always an inverse relationship between consistency and quality—at least for me.
Aim for consistency even over quality (knowing that “babysitting the work” doesn’t always help anyway), and permission to keep publishing even through energetic highs and lows.
Look back at your creative history: do you do better work with more constraints or fewer? What’s your sweet spot? There is no right answer. Bonus: Put a team and/or resources in place to help bolster accountability, take responsibility off your shoulders, and that raises the stakes (in a good way) of missing a deadline.
✍️ Check out Jenny’s personal business essays on Substack, Rolling in D🤦🏻♀️h
📝 Check out full show notes and share with friends: https://itsfreetime.com/episodes/230
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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