Friday, May 8, 2020
Finding a Job that Jives with your Creative Practice
Finding a Job that Jives with your Creative Practice Im so psyched to give you guys a guest post from Nicole Docimo, an artist, illustrator and writer. Ive been reading her blog for a while now (I love her art, her honesty, her viewpoint, her journey), and am loving the recent turn its been taking while Nicole tries to balance a day job with getting her creative business off the ground. The article first appeared on her blog, and when I read it I thought, Now why didnt I write that?! So Im doing the next best thing bringing it to you here as a guest post (with Nicoles permission, of course). Enjoy! One of the biggest concerns I see in my own life and in the creative community in general, is that little nagging question: how do you support yourself financially and be creative at the same time? As I was writing about last week, Iâve been working on figuring this out in my own life. Whether or not you dream of becoming a full-time artist/maker/musician/dancer/actor/writer/etc, there may come a time when you will need or want a side job to make some cash, or to take the pressure off making money with your art and just do what inspires you creatively. Iâve had my fair share of random jobs {more than I can count on two hands}, both full and part-time. After my post last week {where I mentioned that I have hit upon a winning combination with my current job as a courier for the city}, I started thinking that maybe there were some basic characteristics of my job that would apply to what a creative person might be looking for in general in a side-job or day-job. The fo llowing guide is what I came up with. I hope this will give you some ideas on where to start looking for a job that can coexist with your creative life. 1. The fewer hours, the better. This may sound completely obvious, but the fewer hours you work at this outside job, the better. The purpose of this job is to help support your art habit, not cramp it. Take a serious look at exactly how much money you need to support yourselfâ"I mean, reallyâ"whip out the calculator on this one and plug in some actual numbers. Of course, different jobs pay differently, but go into the job search knowing exactly how much money you need to survive. Also, take a minute to figure out if thereâs anything you can trim from your expenditures. It may be difficult to think about this, but what is art-making-time worth to you? 2. Pay attention to scheduling. There is a difference between working from 9 am to 2 pm vs. working from 1 pm to 6 pm. Both of these shifts are five hours long, but the first shift starts in the morning and ends in the afternoon, which can make it feel like youâve been working all day. The second shift leaves you the entire morning for doing your creative work. This may sound like a tiny difference, but trust meâ"that first schedule is stealing more than 5 hoursâ"-unless youâre a seriously early bird, you wonât get any work done before 9 am. Get really honest with yourself and seek out a schedule that leaves you maximum creative time and the optimal situation for youâ"your best time to work could be morning, noon, or nightâ"you decide. 3. Put your art first. As I started to mentioned in that last point, but I canât stress enoughâ"reserve your prime waking hours for your art. I prefer to put my art first, literally, so that I wake up and go immediately to my creative work. Then, by the time I get to my odd job at 1:30 p.m. I have already worked 4+ hours on art, and I can sit pretty knowing that Iâve let my creative spirit run wild. If you get most creative after dark, find a job that will give you nights free (donât forget to leave time for other things like errands, etc). You could also look for a job that has you working every other day, leaving you full creative work days in between. 4. Find a job that lets your mind wander. Creativity loves space and time to run free in your mind. Artists need actual time to do their work, but they also need ample time to let their minds work on their next creation. If you can find a job that keeps your body busy but lets your mind wander, youâll be able to do double-duty and feel like youâre playing even when youâre working at your day job. Working as a courier I can easily let my mind wander while Iâm driving around dropping off mail. Many days I come home with a pocket-full of small pieces of paper jotted with creative ideas. This makes me feel like my day-job work is not only financially productive, but creatively productive, and it gets me ahead of the game on my next creative project. 5. Find a job that lets you be yourself, at least most of the time. The single most soul-killing thing about many day-jobs is that we creatives often feel like we have to pretend to be someone weâre not while weâre working. We have to pretend to care about selling random objects or providing excellent customer service, or about the policies of this or that company. We have to fake it. This makes the time we spend at said jobs feel completely contrary to who we really are, and therefore that much more painful. Look for a job that allows you to be yourself most of the timeâ"you can look for an environment you would feel comfortable in, a creative company that interests you, or in my case, a job that lets you work independently most of the timeâ"when Iâm just driving from office to office delivering mail, I can listen to the radio, think creative thoughts, and just be myself. This makes the whole thing a lot less painful. 6. Remember what you hated most about previous jobs and find one without those qualities. Again, this sounds like a no-brainer, but sometimes it just seems easier to keep getting the same kinds of jobsâ"you have experience in customer service, so shouldnât you continue on that path? Well, if you enjoy chit-chatting with customers, then go right ahead. But if constant interruptions and having to smile all day drive you up the wall (like me), then youâre just leading yourself into your own personal hell each time you get another job like that. For me, the top two most stressful and annoying things are: one: being constantly interrupted and having to put on my âfake faceâ all day long and, two: sitting for hours in front of a computer screen inputting boring data with absolutely no room for a creative thought. And yet, before my current job, I had a whole string of jobs that relied on these thingsâ"in fact, the last job I had before courier incorporated both of these things. I felt physically ill every time I approached the office. I would sit in my co rner, staring at the ceiling, dreaming about the building burning down. Yes, it was that bad. Finding a job that will jive with what you really love (read: will not steal every ounce of positive creative energy in your body) is more about what the job is not, than what it is. Figure out the top two or three things that kill you and use that criteria every time you look at a prospective job. And then, JUST SAY NO. 7. Use your creative powers on your resume. Youâre creative right? You like telling a good storyâ"whether it be through words, images, music, or dance? Well, how about using those powers on your resume? You can be a veritable chameleon in the workplace {hopping from one field to the next} if you can put your creative powers to work on representing yourself. Let me be clear here: I am not telling you to lieâ"but what you can do is reframe your skills in the light of the job youâre applying for. Study the job announcement you want to apply for, underline the skills theyâre looking for, and try to find as many applicable skills from your work history. Look at all tasks you have done both large and small. Say you have been a customer service assistant, but you would like to become a baker. You may not have followed detailed instructions for making brioche in your previous job, but what about all the detailed instructions you followed to input customer orders? See it as a creative exercise: use your imaginative brain to translate your past work into the basic skills your future employer is looking for. 8. Recast your job as what it really is: an opportunity to support your creative work financially. So many of us define ourselves by our jobs. People ask us at a party, âwhat do you do?â and we automatically blurt out whatever way we earn our income. The one big key that will turn having a day-job from drudgery to opportunity is the way you think about it. Think of it as slave drudgery and you will continue to let it run your life. But if you can recast it as an opportunity to work for yourselfâ"to put one set of skills to work for the general benefit of your whole, then you can let the job just be a job and not your identity. All of the ideas above will help you with this pointâ"the less painful the job is to your person, the easier it will be to see your job as not a death sentence, but a workable side-experience that can not only enrich you financially, but: enrich your creative life, give you a break from yourself, get you out of the house, and help you pay your bills. 9. Donât let people make you feel bad for not having a ârealâ job. Many people hassle creatives about âgrowing upâ âgetting seriousâ âgetting a real jobâ {meaning: a job thatâs on the career track that they can understand}. Itâs hard not to let these comments get to youâ"you want to be a useful, law-abiding, contributing citizen. But the truth is, you already areâ"if youâre making time to do what you love {your art}, then youâre giving your ultimate contribution to this worldâ"much more of a contribution than you could ever make climbing a corporate ladder that makes you want to jump out a windowâ"even if you never make one single cent at art! Your contribution to this world is about love, itâs about passion, itâs about sharing your best, most expansive thoughts. To do that, you only need to make timeâ"make time for your art, and then no matter what, you are a success.
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