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Jody Day's avatar

You write that, "Creatives must be afforded the space and permission to do their work at the uncomfortable edges."

-- the thing is, even if we're not 'afforded' the space and permission, we'll do it anyway -- because we can't NOT do it!

We are the edge-walkers, the outsiders. No change ever comes from the status quo, it's always from the edges and underbelly of society. And that's where the artists and seers live too...

--And it's where the best conversations happen too, like here :)

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Sarah Bartley Lark's avatar

Thanks for this chapter, Sarah.

Like many of you, I’ve been thinking a lot about art / creativity in collapse.

I’ve struggled with perfectionism and it severely impacted my creativity or at least sharing my creativity with the world.

I often compare myself to the *best* of the best. And too often thought it wasn’t worth doing something if I wasn’t going to be amazing at it. Why? Where does that come from? Well, I suppose because our modern society has taught me that scale, visibility, monetization, accolades, etc are the measure of value when it comes to art.

Because of the industrialization and commodification of art and of creativity.

I’m reminding myself (and maybe finally believing) that I don’t need to be the best. I don’t need to be amazing. Or impressive. I don’t even need to be good - I just need to be true and connected.

In imagining a smaller, less globalized future, I’m hoping that will encourage people to lean in more deeply to their creativity and bring out more artists content with making for themselves and their immediate community.

I hope in the same way that there will be more community gardens, there are more community bands, galleries, theatre, etc etc

A band on every block! A mural down every lane way!

BRING ON THE ART ❤️

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