Doing your best work isn’t easy. No way around it.
Sometimes, coming up with a good idea feels a bit like pushing a giant boulder uphill.
It. Just. Won’t. Move.
If we’re being real, creation can be downright painful sometimes.
But nothing numbs the pain of doing your best work like a little shot of inspiration.
Ahh, sweet nectar of motivation, let me sip thee!
I think the world is addicted to inspiration. Look on Instagram. Look on YouTube.
The majority of the material on these platforms is palliative in nature. It makes us feel good about what we’re doing. Even if we’re not doing much.
Why?
It feels good to get motivated — even if you don’t do anything or take any action on that feeling.
(Before you say anything about MY Instagram account — YES, I do post motivational quotes. I’m not saying this type of content is inherently bad. When used as a tool to get work done in short bursts, inspiration can be an extremely powerful resource. I just think that we often mistake the tool for the work.)
Perhaps the best thing about inspiration is the deep feeling of focus and clarity you feel when you externalize your reasons for doing something and attribute your work to some source besides your own mind.
That’s when you’ll catch yourself saying things like, “I watched this video on YouTube and it really inspired me….”
Or, if you’re having trouble getting work done, you might say…
“I don’t know what’s wrong with me. I’m just not feeling inspired today.”
Both of those statements make inspiration seem like it’s something outside of you….something that creeps up on you, unexpectedly, somehow taking possession of you and finessing you into action.
What’s worse–because you feel like inspiration just “happens,” you actually sit there and WAIT for it.
Then, you even take it a step further: you depend on it to get anything done.
Maybe you’ve caught yourself saying, “Yeah, I could start this idea I’ve been thinking about…but I’m just not that inspired right now.”
And surprise, surprise: nothing ever gets done.
Why?
Because inspiration is fleeting. It’s a temporary feeling, not a permanent state.
(Zig Ziglar once said that motivation is like bathing — useful, but required daily. Ha!)
Here’s the deal…
You can’t wait for inspiration. If you do, it’s not going to come. If it does, it’ll be a welcome surprise. But it’s not going to help you.
I mean, let’s think about this logically for a second: what’s the value in only doing your best work when you “feel” like it?
That’s like saying, “I only want to go to the gym when I’m feeling good.”
Well, DUH!
Of COURSE you want to go to the gym when you feel good. You feel good, so everything you think about seems like a good idea!!
But what about the days you don’t feel good? The days you don’t feel inspired or motivated? What happens then?
Undoubtedly, days of exhaustion, self-doubt and creative slump will outweigh the days where you feel like a modern day Michelangelo.
Should you just retire to your quiet corner until a picture of a lion on Instagram spurs change and lights a fire inside you?
No.
You can’t let your feelings dictate your behavior. Feelings are variable and ephemeral: they come and go.
Guess what: your work only counts on the days where you DON’T want to do it. It only counts when you’d much rather be doing something else.
The call to your craft is NON-NEGOTIABLE.
When asked how many “reps” he did of a certain exercise, Muhammad Ali famously said, “I don’t know. I only start counting once it starts burning.”
That’s not inspiration. That’s grit. That’s struggle and urgency.
The cold reality is that, sometimes, it’s a real struggle to get your best work into the world.
That’s why so many of us admire great creators, artists and thinkers but so few of us will ever become one.
If you wait to be inspired to do your best work, you’ll be waiting a long time.
Most likely forever.
Inspiration is not coming to get you. But you can seek it out.
The solution: Start the work now.
Do it on the sunny days and the rainy days. Stop giving yourself a “pass” to leave your gifts on the table, unopened. Stop allowing yourself the excuse not to create.
The ironic part is, as you push through the uncomfortable stage (as all students on the road to mastery must) you’ll find that the struggle actually leads to more inspiration — despite the fact that there was none there to begin with.
It’s a feedback system.
You don’t get inspired, then do great work.
You do great work, then get inspired.
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