This is part 12 of a 12 day blog series called “12 Steps You Must Take To Get Into Creative Flow Whenever You Want” or the more seasonal “The 12 Days of Creativeness”.
By now you’ll have realised the massive impact finding your creative flow will have on the quantity and quality of your music and your enjoyment in making it. And to help you get you there I’ve focused on your mental approach to making music.
I’ve focused on this because with the right mindset not only will you find creative flow more often, but you will succeed. And without it you won’t.
It’s astounding that while in almost every other subject – business, leadership, selling, sport, weight loss, dating – you name it, there is a wealth of wisdom on how to use your mind to create success, but in music production virtually none.
Instead, our community is obsessed with how to compress this or how to eq that, what equipment we need before we can do anything, what the specific steps are to write a hit…and so it goes on.
We are obsessed with information and ignore wisdom.
But how you think about what you do and how you do what you do is as important as what you do. And focusing on what you do alone can lead to frustrating months, years or even decades of chasing your tail.
Having said that, I don’t want to suggest in any way that you spend all your time simply thinking and dreaming. For all I have said has no meaning, point, or purpose unless you take action.
Some “success gurus” suggest that simply by thinking and desiring something enough, you’ll somehow get it. I am not one of them.
Everything I’ve written to this point is to get you to do, and continue to do, the one thing that will move you forward.
TAKE ACTION.
Now there are some reasons why you might think you find this challenging. It’s time for some tough talking…
You Can’t Decide What To Do
The worst decision you can make is no decision.
By making no decision, you are making a decision. A decision to let external forces determine what happens. This is the worst decision you can make. It’s the polar opposite of taking responsibility.
Don’t sweat it. Go with your gut instinct, listen to your intuition and take action.
This point is so important that I’ll leave it to someone more qualified than I emphasise the point:
“In any moment of decision, the best thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing, and the worst thing you can do is nothing.” – Theodore Roosevelt
Fear Of Criticism
No matter what they might say, everyone fears criticism.
I fear it when I write these posts. Whenever you put yourself “out there” as soon as you make an impact you will attract criticism. Criticism is a sign you’re doing something important.
You wouldn’t believe a some of the things I’ve been called since starting this blog. And I’m not going to lie to you and say “I don’t care”. I’m human, and being the subject of criticism is unpleasant (particularly when it’s offensive).
But have you noticed that when you read a bad comment, review or criticism of someone else’s work, you end up drawing conclusions about the critic more than the subject of their criticism?
I certainly do.
And anyway, what exactly are you scared of? What’s the worst that could happen?
Asking yourself the right questions. And I ask myself these questions every time I get scared or freaked out. What’s worse? The odd criticism here and there? Or inaction?
Either the criticism will be valid and useful or you will disagree with it. And if it’s insulting just feel sorry for the critic. Either way, you’re giving them power if they stop you from taking action.
(By the way, most people are polite, encouraging, awesome and more than make up for the occasional weirdo.)
Fear is a completely natural part of doing something to your best. Those who are successful acknowledge the fear and do it anyway.
Once again, I’ll let Teddy do the talking:
“It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again; because there is not effort without error and shortcomings; but who does actually strive to do the deed; who knows the great enthusiasm, the great devotion, who spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement and who at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly. So that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat.” – Theodore Roosevelt
Fear Of Failure
I’ve already talked about this elsewhere, but here’s the short version:
If you don’t stop you don’t fail.
Not Enough Time
If making music was important enough to you, you would find the time.
It’s about priorities. You will always find the time to do things that are important to you.
This is the reason I asked you to decide what you want and connect with your purpose. If you have completed those steps your ideal outcome should mean making music has jumped the top of your list of priorities.
If it hasn’t, maybe it’s not for you. In that case, stop beating yourself up about it!
If it has – make time and take action.
Not Enough Knowledge Or Equipment
Both of these are excuses, pure and simple.
Many, many great musicians have become great by starting with no “knowledge” and very little equipment.
Even if you have an old beat up laptop, you will already have more power at your fingertips than most musicians in the history of music.
And unless you are tone deaf or don’t possess ears and a brain, you already have enough knowledge to make great music.
Nuff said. Take action.
How To Ensure You Take Action
Find A Mentor
There is no better way to ensure you take action than by finding someone who will point you in the right direction, be a sounding board, a model, and hold you accountable.
I thought for many years that I could do it all alone. I was wrong.
I now have a number of mentors who I often turn to for help in many different ways.
Whether it be a partner, manager, agent, label guy, teacher or coach – a great mentor will inspire you, push you, and be there for you when the going get tough.
Break It Down
In just 12 posts, it wasn’t possible to teach you everything.
And at the beginning, by getting you to think of your ideal future I’m aware that despite the last post on goals and planning, the enormity of what you want to achieve might be causing you to wonder what to do next.
The compelling future that you’re now working towards might seem distant and out of reach, but just know that all your musical heroes have been exactly where you are now.
Trust that you know what to do. Because you do. It might be scary, it might be a challenge, but isn’t it more scary to imagine living the rest of your life wondering “what if”?
Break down your overall goal into smaller sub-goals until they become doable but challenging.
Then pick one. If you’re wondering which one to pick, just ask yourself which one seems right. Relax. Ask the right question, and the answer will come.
Then – take action.
Ok, I think you might have got the point now. You must take action!!!
Go Forth. Prosper. Rock it. The world needs your music…
A Handy Summary Of The Posts In The Series
Day 0 – My aims with this series and for you this year.
Day 1 – How to make lightning fast creative decisions.
Day 2 – Build your desire by creating your compelling future.
Day 3 – The most common creativity killing mistake music producers make.
Day 4 – Forget procrastination and make decisions easily when you take this simple step.
Day 5 – How the things you think move you forward might be doing the opposite.
Day 6 – The unusual step you must take to become a successful music producer.
Day 7 – Change a few simple words and do more in less time with better results.
Day 8 – What’s the vital ingredient that’s missing from your work?
Day 9 – The source of all distractions and how to neutralise it for good.
Day 10 – How to finish up to 5 times more music in the same time by thinking differently.
Day 11 – How to ensure that every goal propels you towards creative flow.
Day 12 – What you must do next.
This is part 12 of a 12 day blog series called “12 Steps You Must Take To Get Into Creative Flow Whenever You Want” or the more seasonal “The 12 Days of Creativeness”.