enJOY it

an archived personal and craft blog from Elise Blaha Cripe.

Divedeep

I heard a lot of great stuff at WDS, but one of my favorite bits came from author Scott Berkun. He spoke about the "inspiring story cycle" (though I am not sure that's exactly what he called it) and about how we look for the feel-good story or the inspirational message before we get motivated to sit down to work. And when we do sit down, we feel like the work doesn't "feel-good" or seem "inspirational" and so we figure it's time to hear another story. It can go on and on.

Scott nailed the point home and talked about how when you're sitting at your desk and you find yourself thinking "this isn't fun," that's when you really start working. That's when you're finally writing your own inspiring story.

I found myself nodding along. I have totally done this. I have spent a lot of time consuming instead of creating. Browsing other peoples' blogs. Looking at other peoples' images. Reading other peoples' stories. I have found myself valuing the already completed work of others more than the in-progress work of my own.

We all contribute. No matter what you're doing: getting an education, raising kids, handing insurance claims, writing books, trying cases, building bridges, making sense of spreadsheets, teaching students, growing veggies, managing financial operations, building wells in Africa, you're contributing.

And we all consume. All day, everyday, we consume. There is nothing wrong with taking in information. There's nothing wrong with fist-pumping at someone else's inspiring story. Or tearing up over someone else's breakthough. It's part of the process and certainly not a bad thing.

But the trick when you're trying to do something different, is to pay attention to the ratio. Am I spending three hours looking at other peoples' work and only one hour on my own? Can I flip that equation? Three hours for me, just one hour for others?

When it's time to crank something out, I have learned (through practice) that "work" happens in my own head. Work is not something that comes to me. Lightning doesn't strike. The lightbulb doesn't go off. I go to the work. I chase the lightning down. And I flip the lights on and off until they stay lit.

If you're struggling to get your own shop going or your own blog running or your own business idea off the ground, reading about other people stories is only inspiring to a point. Eventually you have to turn it off and sit at a desk and hammer it out. You have to embrace that not as enjoyable part because that's the part when it's actually happening.

The best example I can think of is writing. We hear all the time that if you want to be a good writer you have to read a lot. (I totally think this is true.) Reading provides access to new ideas. It helps you figure out what you like and don't like. It can help you narrow in a bit on your own style.

But you know what really makes a good writer? Someone who writes.

I love NaNoWriMo, November's National Novel Writing Month. The goal is to write 50,000 words in one month. So, basically to write a book in 30 days. The non-profit organization exists to help turn people (nearly 600,000 last year) into novelists by encouraging them to, you guessed it, write.

It's not easy. The more you read during that month the less you're writing. The more you're worried about everyone else the less you're writing. The more you're caught up in your own fear, the less you're writing. The more you're thinking "hmmm, this doesn't feel fun," the less you're writing.

There is really only one way to write 50,000 words in one month: Write them.

You want to make stuff? Make it. You want to write stuff? Write it. You want to do something different? Do it. Get in and be inspired, but then GET OUT. And then get to work.

Since writing this post, I created Get To Work Book! It's a day planner + goal setting workbook that is designed to help you take your big goals turn them into something real. Learn more and shop the brand here.

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66 responses to “time spent consuming vs. creating.”

  1. Michelle Avatar

    Absorbed this post like a sponge, and turned it into 3 blog posts, an August post schedule, finished 2 projects and hi 5’d myself at 9pm last night! I still felt somewhat intimidated as I worked through the day but decided to feel that and do it anyway.. and I did. Thanks again Elise!

    Like

  2. amanda dawn Avatar
    amanda dawn

    thank you for this.
    when i sit down to write my business plan, i always feel like i’m getting no where. and it’s taking so long. and whats the point. this helps a lot. the other day i bunkered down in a cafe, and told myself “this isn’t supposed to be fun” and actually got things done.
    thanks again 🙂

    Like

  3. Cheryl Avatar

    Great post! I think my favorite ideas are, “can I flip this, 1 hour of them, and 3 hours of me” and “Get in, get inspired, and GET OUT!” Thanks so much. You’ve inpsired me, and now it’s time for me to GET OUT! Best of luck to you.

    Like

  4. Filiz Avatar

    Yessssssssss. Nail. On. The. Head.
    You have a brilliant and remarkable talent for breaking it down and making common sense of everything. I love it. It’s one of the reasons I keep coming back to read your blog (instead of working on my own, ha!)

    Like

  5. Jessica Avatar
    Jessica

    To quote Macklemore: “the greats weren’t great because from birth they could paint; the greats were great because they paint a lot”

    Like

  6. Vanessa Avatar
  7. silke Avatar

    Unfortunately, your link doesn’t work … At least not for me.

    Like

  8. Emily Dismukes Avatar

    There are a lot of great thoughts in here that I really need to start keeping in mind. I have been trying very hard lately to balance out my ratio of consuming vs creating and so far I’m still consuming way more…I need to change that. Maybe I just need to work on being more conscious of it in the moment. Thanks for this!

    Like

  9. Kaelyn Avatar

    Yep. This is so true and something I needed to read. I suffer from instant gratification syndrome and I’m only lately starting to embrace the process instead of the end result.

    Like

  10. The Travel Chica - Stephanie Avatar

    Scott’s message at WDS about consumption versus creation really stuck with me too.

    Like

  11. Keegan Avatar
    Keegan

    NEEDED THIS.

    Like

  12. amy tangerine Avatar

    seriously, this could not have come at a more perfect time. LOVE.

    Like

  13. Joey Avatar

    Loved this post the first time I read, and the ten other times after that!
    It’s inspired me to get writing and stop reading (as much), and more relevant perhaps – stop comparing!
    All that said… I’m here again… for the inspiration this post brings 😛
    Thanks for writing all the time 🙂

    Like

  14. Jon Barton Avatar

    Silke,
    Click the link. You’ll get the 404 Not Found page.
    Click the address bar and manually take the paren ) and the period. off the end of the link, then hit enter. It’ll work then.
    That’s a trick you can use anywhere – if you get a 404 Not Found error, look for extra characters after the address, or two ‘http://www.WebsiteAddress.com/’ pieces in the address. Spotting and removing the extra stuff will get you where you wanted to go most of the time. =)

    Like

  15. Hannah Avatar

    This is so true! Great timing aswell as this is exactly what I’ve been thinking about lately, and you make such a great point about the ratio between creating and consuming, it’s definitely something I need to have a good think about!
    Hannah x
    Hanniemc.co.uk

    Like

  16. Jessica Avatar

    I feel like this is exactly what I do with your blog Elise, when I feel I need motivation I consume all of your blog posts. Sometimes it inspired me with ideas to create and write my own story but sometimes I am satisfied with the good feeling that it gives me and happy to let that be my work time. Which is terrible, I know I should be working on my own stuff. Great post, thanks Elise

    Like

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