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The Power of Daily Practice

How Creative and Performing Artists (and Everyone Else) Can Finally Meet Their Goals

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Anyone who has ever picked up a creativity or self-help guide has likely been advised to keep to a daily schedule, daily pages, or other everyday ritual. But "just do it" usually just doesn't work. Longtime creativity coach and therapist Eric Maisel has found an approach that does work: giving clients, and now listeners, a clear understanding of what makes them personally blocked or stuck and unable to start or finish. Not enough time, resources, or talent? Fear of success, guilt about being "selfish," and variations on the theme of "what's the point?"

Maisel has spent thirty years helping people overcome these kinds of blocks with skills including anxiety management, positive self-talk, cognitive behavioral therapy, and even "sleep thinking." The tools Maisel offers are a potent alternative to waiting for the spirit to move or the muse to inspire: a sustainable, self-directed path to success.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 3, 2020
      Maisel (Unleashing the Artist Within), a former psychotherapist, explores the benefits of understanding and creating a daily routine in this accessible guide. He begins with 20 brief chapters, each corresponding to an element he believes is crucial to maintaining a healthy daily practice—initiation
      , honesty, repetition, playfulness, ceremony, and self-trust among them. In part two, he explains varieties of daily practices that the reader may want to establish relating to goals of creativity, recovery, health, activism, and “business-building.” For instance, he proposes that aspiring artists establish a minimum 20-minute daily practice and, when feeling stuck, make a chart of things that inspire either love or hate. Maisel also shares anecdotes of those who have implemented practices successfully, such as one woman’s business-building practice of taking a break from her day job each morning to briefly work on her personal business and remind herself there is “more time coming.” Maisel interrupts the narrative repeatedly to direct readers to his website of personal philosophy, “kirism,” and to take jabs at the pharmaceutical industry, which he believes aids a contemporary “epidemic of restlessness.” While repetitive, this straightforward volume provides plenty of practical advice.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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