Over the last few days I have been reminded of a flaw I have. This flaw was first brought to my attention during my Junior year of college. An advisor of mine smacked me in the face with it.
My flaw-
I just flat out fail to ever really talk about what I do. So many times I gaze upon surprised faces followed by, “You do that?”, their head cocked to the side in disbelief that I never bothered to tell them.
Each time I respond, “Yep, been doing this for a few years.” I either take out my phone, laptop, or sketchbook (because I always have 1 of them on hand at all times). And start showing them some of my work.
I get the general response from them, “Why aren’t you doing this professionally, profiting from it?”
Good Question- why aren’t I?
Biggest reason why is I did not find or understand what having a passion for something was until now. How to let it drive you.
As I mentioned earlier, this flaw was brought to my attention when I had to create a resume for a Technical Writing course. It was pretty blank, so the advisor started asking some probing questions, and the flood gates to my abilities flung open.
She told me, “You need to put all of that on here. How else would anyone know unless you tell them.”
I’ve become better at it somewhat, but I still tend not to speak on what all I do. I tend to just mention things in passing during general conversations. During these conversations (especially among friends) I sit back and pause for a moment and think, “I kick ass at creativity - period.”
Dare I list out all of what I can do here?
Nope. Just not my nature to stand on a platform yelling out, “Look at what all I can do!”
That’s just my flaw-
Saw Alice and Wonderland last week on Blu Ray for the first time. I loved the movie, it was great. I’m a fan of Tim Burton and Johnny Depp. (Quentin Tarantino is still my #1 though). Alice showed me a glimmer of hope that, creativity isn’t dead yet. It still has some kicks left, and just may spark back life…—
- Shala
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Feel free to contact me about anything. I’d love to hear from you…
I really like this one. It’s simple in terms of color, but the creativity and execution is on point. Plus it tells a story of a sketch taping itself back together. I really like artwork dealing with torn paper and pencil drawings, because it feels real and natural to me. That’s how I work, torn pages everywhere as I come up with ideas throughout the day on the go, hands smeared with the ink of a pencil. love it…