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This is not the first time I've said that inspiration is overrated (see episode 8) but I really get into more deeply in this episode. I also had my own experience recently that made it SO clear that inspiration can even be a liability.
Inspiration gets a lot of hype.
We tend to treat it like the magical force that makes creativity possible—the spark that finally gets us to sit down, start the project, write the thing, make the art, launch the idea.
But in this episode, I'm making a slightly rebellious argument:
Not only is inspiration unneccessary and overrated, but waiting around or demanding to feel it before you'll get to work? That's amateur hour.
When we put inspiration on a pedestal—when we believe we need to feel inspired before we create—we accidentally make our creative work fragile. We wait. We stall. We blame the absence of that magical feeling instead of doing the thing we came here to do.
And ironically, when inspiration does show up, it can make the crash even harder when the work turns out to be… well… work.
In this episode we explore:
• Why inspiration can sometimes become a liability
• The surprising downside of waiting to "feel inspired" before creating
• What actually helps you stick with your work when it gets hard
• The difference between amateurs who wait for inspiration and professionals who show up regardless
• How devotion, discipline, and willingness create a deeper kind of creative power
We also talk about something close to my heart: the mystical side of creativity. The moment when effort meets grace. The way inspiration and divine guidance tend to arrive after we show up—not before.
If you've ever waited for motivation, inspiration, or the perfect mood before taking action… this episode might change how you think about creativity, discipline, and your relationship with your own work.
Inspiration is nice.
But devotion will take you much farther.
Big love,
Amanda 🎙️
By Amanda GoldThis is not the first time I've said that inspiration is overrated (see episode 8) but I really get into more deeply in this episode. I also had my own experience recently that made it SO clear that inspiration can even be a liability.
Inspiration gets a lot of hype.
We tend to treat it like the magical force that makes creativity possible—the spark that finally gets us to sit down, start the project, write the thing, make the art, launch the idea.
But in this episode, I'm making a slightly rebellious argument:
Not only is inspiration unneccessary and overrated, but waiting around or demanding to feel it before you'll get to work? That's amateur hour.
When we put inspiration on a pedestal—when we believe we need to feel inspired before we create—we accidentally make our creative work fragile. We wait. We stall. We blame the absence of that magical feeling instead of doing the thing we came here to do.
And ironically, when inspiration does show up, it can make the crash even harder when the work turns out to be… well… work.
In this episode we explore:
• Why inspiration can sometimes become a liability
• The surprising downside of waiting to "feel inspired" before creating
• What actually helps you stick with your work when it gets hard
• The difference between amateurs who wait for inspiration and professionals who show up regardless
• How devotion, discipline, and willingness create a deeper kind of creative power
We also talk about something close to my heart: the mystical side of creativity. The moment when effort meets grace. The way inspiration and divine guidance tend to arrive after we show up—not before.
If you've ever waited for motivation, inspiration, or the perfect mood before taking action… this episode might change how you think about creativity, discipline, and your relationship with your own work.
Inspiration is nice.
But devotion will take you much farther.
Big love,
Amanda 🎙️