I feel like instead of doing something to just the best of my ability, I just simply try to do the best of what I'm given or what I've come up with in my art. Most people who know me or who have talked to me see that I over think a lot. I guess I just like to consider all of the possibilities because I'm never sure of myself and how I want to do things. I need to just pick a path and stick with it and create a time limit for myself for how long I have to choose. I remember doing this another time in order to come up with something to write about for a blog and it worked like a charm. The one question is: Why haven't I used it yet? I need to get the voices out of my head that are stopping for finding the perfect thing. Instead, the perfect think should be what I think is right. If it's not relevant to whatever the main objective was, I'll be justified and hopefully disciplined if done enough times. I think discipline is as an important component to standing up to your fear as is facing it like a man/strong woman. If I don't think that you'll be able to do something again and again and again like blog posting, why can't I just think ahead at an unfinished product like you always would do with a painting of the consequences. That will could possibly teach me to keep pushing along and get over my fear of posting something that may seem embarrassing or revealing. Think of a more positive outcome.
Lastly, I feel like many artists tend to live in the moment with many things. They choose to reflect on their work only if it composes inspiration or something they are quite proud of. However, if you ever reflect on something bad, you can either choose to ignore it, complain about it, or reflect upon it for how and what you can do better. Also, don't worry if you over think a lot and don't worry too much about how something's gonna turn out. At least you have a lot of options in your head to make anything from a different angle and at least you have the talent and a hell of potential to set a goal for yourself. You know where you're going. You know where to start. Just go for it. If you mess up, use that as your advantage to looking at things from a new angle. Isn't that how all artists are unique? The inevitability of messing up makes artistry even more worth while. I hope you really dug into my cranium to see how fear and the ways to conquer that fear take over my art process. I bid you all adieu.
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