Creative Lens: Perspective

Creative Lens: Perspective

We live in a world that moves fast, faster than most of us were built for. And if I’m honest, I don’t naturally slow down. I rush past moments, looking for answers, trying to keep up, trying to solve things as quickly as possible. But I’ve been learning that creativity doesn’t show up in the rush. It starts when I choose to slow down long enough to actually see what’s in front of me.

That kind of slowing down doesn’t just happen, it takes intention. It’s a shift. A decision to pause and look again.

Because the truth is, the same situation can either feel like a problem… or an invitation. And most of the time, the difference isn’t the situation, it’s the perspective I bring to it.

So I’m trying to practice something simple:
When I hit something that feels impossible, instead of pushing harder or getting frustrated, I stop and ask, “What would it take to make this possible?”

Not because I always have the answer, but because that question opens something up.

I’m realizing more and more… I don’t need a bigger idea.
I just need a different angle.

Creative Lens: Attention

Creative Lens: Attention

As a creative, I know how easy it is to feel like I’m supposed to come up with something completely new or that no one’s ever seen or heard before. And if I’m not careful, that starts to feel like pressure… the kind that actually shuts creativity down instead of fueling it.

But I’ve been wondering lately is what if creating isn’t always about chasing what isn’t there? What if it’s about paying attention to what already is?

The ordinary stuff. The things I walk past every single day without thinking twice.

I’m starting to realize those moments aren’t empty, they’re actually full. Full of ideas that are just sitting there, hiding in plain sight, waiting for me to notice.

So here’s something I’ve been trying:
Pick one thing you see every day: your coffee cup, your notebook, the front door you walk through a dozen times and just stop for a second.

Look at it like it’s the first time.

Pay attention to the details you’ve been missing. The texture, the wear or the way it sits in the light. And just notice what comes up.

Not forcing anything. Just paying attention.

Because maybe creativity isn’t always about making something out of nothing…
Maybe it starts by finally seeing what’s been there all along.