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Actualizing Spirituality Through Creativity

Topic: Career Coach and Career CoachingBy Barbara BowenPublished Recently added

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The Creative Process is the fundamental dynamic of all innovation in every field and discipline. It can be actualized for good or ill, but this essay chooses to place focus on its positive values and connection to the arts, healing and spirituality.

Creativity is often misunderstood to be an act of the ego and intellect. In truth, the Creative Process is fundamentally a spiritual one. When the imagination is in flight, we are moved to give form to this inner life. Creating charges us with energy. We are grounded in our bodies, yet the creative act takes us beyond ourselves. We exit the world of reacting and enter the delicious world of creating, where we lose track of time. By acting, we bring spirit into matter. By acting, we love our creations into being. Creativity is vital for well-being, not just for artists involved in creative arts, but for everyone, in their own way. When we engage our Creativity, we engage our spirituality. In creating, we re-create ourselves. In re-creation lies the intimate connection between healing, spirituality and the creative arts.

"A fish is born to swim, a bird is born to fly, and a human is born to create." I’m not sure where that quote comes from. But it’s a great one, cutting to the essence of our creativity. In an early Gnostic Christian Gospel, Jesus states: "If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you. If you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you." "Destroy" is a dramatic word, and is probably meant more figuratively than literally. But if we are not expressing our inbor
Creative gifts, we feel loss and pain that may cause us minor to serious trouble. Our hearts will surely hurt, to one degree or another.

Julia Cameron, an author who designs wonderful tools for unleashing Creativity, makes the observation that Creativity is a heart-centered pursuit. She noticed that embedded in the word "heart" is the word "art." Also embedded there is the word "ear." Many spiritual traditions involve the art of listening to the heart. So, when we express our Creativity from a heart-centered place, we are practicing our spirituality. While in the Creative state, we become grounded and in touch with both the core of our individual essence and the universal "ocean" of Creativity. This is not to say that the Creative Process always feels good. Added to the recipe are various helpings of fear, resistance and anxiety. We often need to pass through a threshold of discomfort in order to actualize what is calling to be created.

Creativity is inherently connected with spirituality. Along the creative path we confront many aspects of ourselves, and meet many opportunities for growth. On this road, we face attitudes and behaviors affecting our Creativity. We learn to change perceptions, overcome obstacles, stay in touch with our bodies, identify and listen to our intuition, and to gain more insight and trust in our path, as creative and spiritual beings.

When we are creating from what arises in the heart, we are in touch with animating power. When we are present and living in connection with the moment, the portal between the inner life and the deeper universal well opens. While deeply and Creatively engaged in our present, we are simulataneouly creating our future.

Do you need content? You may use this article on your website, or in your newsletter. The only requirement is inclusion of the following sentence plus active link:nn*Article by Barbara Bowen of http://www.GatewaysCoaching.com - the definitive source for Art Career Coaching.*nnn

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About the Author

Barbara Bowen is an artist and founder of Gateways Coaching, helping art professionals in transition worldwide to clarify goals and reach them faster. For an in-depth profile, please nvisit her Web site: www.GatewaysCoaching.comnn

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