The Key to Creative Happiness: A How-To Guide
Some pursue happiness, others create it. ~ Unknown

I’m happy. Not because my life is perfect and wonderful—it’s far from it.
No, I’m happy because, on a daily basis, I get to do what I love the most—write poetry and create art.
Yet my happiness hinges upon something else as well. Something that’s bigger than my own personal pleasure. Something that makes me feel connected to others and to my world.
The Joy of Creating
Writing eases my suffering…writing is my way of reaffirming my own existence. ~ Gao Xingjian
I believe most writers write, first and foremost, for themselves. I know I do. The pure delight of language and playing around with words and meanings keep me going back to the page day after day.
Whether it’s a fascination with what words can do or the motivation created by how it feels to express our experiences, opinions, and observations, ultimately, writers write and artists create because we have a deep need to do so. Without that deep need and passionate desire, then I imagine one would simply get bored and abandon the pursuit.
Creativity gives the artist joy and a sense of purpose then. The process of writing and creating art tells us who we are and what we’re meant to do on this planet.
The Importance of Sharing
Happiness comes when your work and words are of benefit to yourself and others. ~ Buddha
The personal pleasure and benefits artists receive from writing and being creative are great. But I’ve found that happiness is enhanced and increased when we share our creative work with others.
Sharing our writing and creative work can make us feel connected to others and to the world around us. And it can make us feel that we’re actively participating in the creation of culture and history.
At the very least, sharing our creative work can give us ways to receive feedback from others. And that feedback is important to feeding our souls as artists. It tells us that we have some impact on others and on our world and in some cases, that we’re changing hearts as well as minds.
Why Share?
Happiness is not something ready-made. It comes from your own actions. ~ His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama
The twin desires to create and to share our artistic work with others birth and sustain creative happiness.
Yet, what if you’re shy or insecure about your work? What if you fear negative feedback? And what to do if you actually receive it?
These are common concerns for artists, especially beginning artists who haven’t yet learned to take calculated and well-thought risks for sharing their creative work.
But risk, whether large or small, is necessary for art.
Without it, there’s simply no way to achieve the creative success we seek, and ultimately there’s no way to actually create, as the act of creating is itself always a risk of sorts.
Moreover, sharing our work with others empowers us to hone and master our craft. Like all living things, art needs the kind of sustenance that can only come from outside itself.
Improving our skills is easier when we dare to share our work with others who can offer the kind of feedback necessary for our growth as artists.
How to Share and Be Happy
To be happy with yourself, you’ve got to lose yourself now and then. ~ Bob Genovesi
Still, I know from experience how difficult it is to overcome personal insecurities in order to share one’s work. So, how do you overcome your fears and insecurities in order to share your creative work with others and gain the happiness that comes from that sharing?
Shift your frame of mind.
First, overcoming any fear or insecurity requires a shift in perspective, a kind of reframing of experience, in which the potential rewards outweigh possible negative outcomes.
Instead of obsessing over all the potentially negative consequences of sharing your work, dwell instead on the inevitable rewards—feelings of success, connection with others and with your world, and the opportunity to hone and master your craft.
Take small, calculated risks.
Early on, it’s important to share your work among those you trust the most, such as friends and family members. Then, once you feel ready, you can take some larger risks and share your work with others through different means.
Try playing your music at a small, friendly open mic. Start a blog for your photography and invite your friends and acquaintances to visit it. Take a painting class. Join an online writing site. Or submit your work to a journal. There are so many ways to share your art and with some forethought and planning, you can easily find incremental ways to take risks and share your creative projects.
Let your work speak for itself.
Perhaps, though, the biggest part of sharing one’s creative work is letting it go and allowing it to speak for itself. As I’ve asserted in a previous article, we are not the products of our creative labor.
It’s important not to confuse your ego, or your sense of self with your artistic creations.
Once you draw a boundary between your work and your ego, letting your work speak for itself, or stand on its own legs so to speak, is much easier.
Let go of failure.
The success or failure of your work says very little about who you are as a person or as an artist. Instead, its success or failure speaks to the work itself. And while all of us want to hit that artistic home run every time, it’s just not possible to do so.
More significantly, there’s really no way to fail at creativity. Creativity just doesn’t operate within the terms of success and failure.
Rather than focusing on potential failure, embrace your creativity for what it is—an inherent and perfect part of who you are.
Light the Path
When you write from the heart, you not only light the dark path of your readers, you light your own way as well. ~ Marjorie Holmes
So, if you’re seeking to enhance your creative happiness, then share your work with others. Put it into the world and let it shine there. You never know who may desperately need your words or your art. You never know the amount of happiness it might provide another.
So, let your creativity and artistic work illuminate a path of happiness not only for yourself but for others as well.
What makes you happy in your creativity?
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Flickr photo courtesy of Illuminaut
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