or
a hobby. Call them quirks. Call them idiosyncrasies. Whatever you want
to call them, creative individuals need this routine in order to
complete the task at hand. For my own creative work – the writing part
of my job – I have a series of steps I must go through for each article
before the final step of sitting down at my computer to compose the
first draft.
Of
course, my work starts with research and interviews, but the quirk of
my writing process is the composition. You see, once I have all of my
notes together and I know generally what I want to say with a certain
article, I will "write" it in my mind before a single word is typed at
my keyboard. I will think about the article for days, working it out in
my head exactly what I want to write. So, when I finally sit down to
compose an article, I will know how it begins, what I want to say in the
middle of the article, how the article will be structured, and how it
should end. Most people probably do this with notes or an outline, but
I've just always worked it out in my mind. It's just the way I work.
This might not be the most efficient or practical way to work, but the process works for
me. It is just my way of doing things, of getting the job done. In
thinking about my own process recently, I started to wonder what your
creative processes must be like. Surely, you each have specific, or
perhaps peculiar, ways of getting the job done. How could you not? You
work in a creative field and often are tasked with finding new ways to
do your job. So do you have a unique creative process that others find
quirky and idiosyncratic? Tell me what this process is, how it works for
you, and why your coworkers raise their eyebrows. I'll understand, and
perhaps other readers will too. Who knows, you may inspire someone to
adjust his or her own creative process.
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