Success to the artist means making time to make art. All the rest is just details. |
Yesterday I wrote about three techniques for success. A
reader asked, “Do you actually keep a planner with your schedule blocked out?
Or have you just worked your way into a routine? It’s hard when everyone else’s
schedules are so fluid.”
I worked my way into this schedule gradually, so it’s not
written down. But I do understand about being answerable to other people’s
schedules. It’s part of working from home, and part of being a parent. I just
try to shake the interruptions off and get back to what I was doing as quickly
as possible. After all, if I were in a corporate setting, I’d be interrupted
all the time for meetings.
In part, it means persevering even when everything is going wrong. |
It helps if you understand exactly what your goals are.
People with dependent kids or parents are actually working two jobs at once. To
pretend you can work eight hours a day at art when you have a toddler helping
is unreasonable, but you should be able to work some time every day. Keep that
chain unbroken.
The point of being self-employed is that you can set your
own goals. For example, to scamper over rocks at my advanced age, I must keep
fit. So I spend several hours a day exercising. For a younger person, that
would be a ridiculous priority.
Success—for an artist—means organizing your life so you can
make art. Everything else flows from there.
Let me know if you’re interested in painting with me in Belfast, Maine in
August, 2014 or in Rochester at any time. Click here for
more information on my Maine workshops!
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