Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
  • Photos
  • Projects
  • About
  • Blog
  • Book
Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
  • Photos
  • Projects
  • About
  • Blog
  • Book

9 Things To Do When You’re Feeling Stale

Being a professional creative might seem like the ultimate dream job for some–and for many of us it is. But it ain’t always easy. In fact, staying inspired is really hard work. I recently received the above tweet (to @chasejarvis) and it got me thinking. Here’s 9 things I’ve done over the course of my 10+ year career that have helped me overcome those times when uninspired or stale work invades:

1. Make a major life change.
For me, I was in a stale spot in 2005, unsure of what to do next, so we up-and-moved to Paris. It changed my work, my career, and my life. Moving might sound like a huge deal, but it doesn’t have to be. Try Berlin, New York, or anywhere on the planet that inspires or scares you. Things like this can be done cheaply – and once you put your mind to it, barriers just fall away. Inspiration points = 10.

2. Travel. This can take many forms depending on your budget and timeline, but the gist is to shake up your routine. I can be lots of long weekends regionally, or the other side of the globe. Don’t rely on your standard morning cereal to inspire you. Have fish soup for breakfast in Japan, baked beans in London, or a tuna fish sandwich on Route 66. Sleep in tent or a hostel, or a castle. Travel by train, foot, bike or rickshaw. Mix it up. Meet people.

3. Set the Camera Down. Give yourself a break. Live a life without your camera for a predetermined time frame – a month or two or three. For me, this made me miss shooting soo much. I noticed things in the world that I longed to photograph. And when I picked up that camera again, I was hungry.

4. Watch films. And I’m not necessarily referring to summer blockbusters. I mean track down some art films. Documentaries. Fantasies. Seek out your local art house cinema, or downloa some films that you’d not ordinarily put atop your list. Reach out to friends and colleagues for their most inspiring flicks. This will get your mind going both conceptually and visually.

5. Look inside. Deal with that stuff in your life that you’re not dealing with, or point a spotlight on those things in you that you know not what they are. Personal sacrifices…[click the ‘continue reading’ link below]—
…and insights are a huge key to individual creativity and often bring out the best in who we are. These experiences can be humbling and challenging. Haven’t talked with your brother in 2 years because of that fight you guys had? Reach out. Not sure why you have an aversion to hard work, success or failure? Explore that. And let yourself experience those emotions, those pains, or those moments of clarity you find on that journey. Those things can drive incredible work in your creative self. What pictures could you take that no one else in the world could take? Those can only be found by looking inside. You want a “signature” style? That’s where you’ll find it.

6. Become a voracious reader. It seems like a cycle for me – when I read a lot I’m creative, and I’m creative when I read a lot. The material I’m reading matters a little, but generally I chow down on a steady diet of biographies of artists I admire, classic fiction, philosophy, books on cultivating creativity, and monthlies in design, obscure fashion rags, or inspiring foreign design magazines. Blogs too – especially ones that keep me guessing on their content – less how to and more ‘why’. Whatever your ‘thing’ is. Read about it.

7. Carry a sketchbook or an iPhone. All the times in my life when I’ve been on the creative rocketship have included a sketchbook as a part of my daily routine. I’ve never sat down and particularly drawn a ton, but I jot notes, make sketches, and take notice of things that inspire me. For me, this has really transformed into a role for my iPhone. The camera is my visual notebook – a snap here or there, a dissection of the visual vocabulary around me. I couldn’t live without it. Voice memos that I mail to myself in brief moments of inspiration, or notes I jot and send myself via email. Whether it’s a notebook or a handheld computer, the important thing is that you’re recording ideas, inspiration, emotions for later reconsideration.

8. Get healthy. There’s a longstanding tradition of artists in every culture being exceptionally unhealthy creatures. Complete overindulgence to the point of destruction. While I’m a strong advocate of experience, experimentation, and sometimes living loudly – I’ve found that for me these are ultimately best if they’re short term methods to blow off steam or to temporarily avoid what’s going on inside. Necessary evils I’d argue–but definitely not the key to creativity. I’m far more creative when I’m in a healthy place. Balanced, energized, alive, honed, exercising, taking time for myself, my friends, and my family.

9. Do something creative everyday as a practice. If you sit around waiting for the perfect inspiration, you’ll make a lot less stuff, and the stuff you do make will be of a lot lower quality because your skills will be in the gutter. Creativity can be fostered. There are neural pathways that you’re opening up, blood that your pumping around your brain. Again, enter my iphone. I post photos almost every single day (follow this on Twitter and Facebook). Some are great, quirky, unusual or evocative; others not so much. Banal. Purely experiential. Not everything you make will be great, but you’ll be more attuned to the things you make that are great, and you’ll have the wisdom to recognize those things that beg for more of your creative attention when they hit you like a freight train.

—
Get my every move: Follow Chase Jarvis on Twitter
Get exclusive content: Become a Fan on Facebook

Related Posts

10 Things Every Creative Person (That’s YOU) Must Learn
chase jarvis surfing photo
How to Create Consistently When Inspiration Runs Dry
Chase Jarvis at the podcast microphone
Beware of Inspiration
The Power of the Blank Page with Margaret Atwood
CEOs Wear Sneakers: A Conversation with KSWISS President Barney Waters
Break Out of Creative Ruts

43 replies on:
9 Things To Do When You’re Feeling Stale

Comments navigation

Previous
  1. tabz says:
    February 4, 2015 at 10:57 am

    At this time I am going to do my breakfast, after having my
    breakfast coming yet again to read more news.

  2. review says:
    December 20, 2014 at 1:14 am

    Thank you for another informative site. Where else could I
    am getting that kind of information written in such an ideal approach?
    I have a project that I am simply now operating on, and I’ve been at
    the glance out for such information.

  3. Julissa says:
    December 8, 2014 at 1:05 pm

    Sign your personal vendors up. There’s, needless to say, another method to earn money from YouTube: cut right out the middle male and sign up your own sponsors.
    If youare in a position to develop a considerable audience, you’ll have the opportunity to join up sponsors for your coding who want to promote
    services and their products to your audience. There’s no basic formulation for registering sponsors on your
    method; everything depends on the amount of potential vendors your audience, and their costs.
    But when performed appropriately, this is often an incredibly beneficial source of revenue for channels that are
    facebook.

Comments navigation

Previous

Comments are closed.

BUY NEVER PLAY IT SAFE NOW!

Get weekly, curated access to the best of everything I do.

Popular Posts

20250826_CJLIVE_DontTradeDreams_Micro_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Don’t Trade Your Dreams for Security
20250812_CJLIVE_YouMakeTheWork_Micro_Thumb_16x9_v2.5AI Doesn’t Create the Work. You Do.
20250118_CJLIVE_LifeIsLong_Micro_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Is Life Really Too Short? Rethinking Our Rush To “Make It”
20250305_CJLIVE_MelissaArnotReid_Thumb_16x9_v2.5What If Your Hardest Climb Is Within?
20250204_CJLIVE_AmieMcNee_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Stop Waiting for Permission to Create—Here’s How to Start
On the right side of the image, the bold text reads: “THIS IS WHY MEN ARE FALLING BEHIND” The words "THIS IS WHY" are in bold white, while "MEN ARE FALLING BEHIND" is in bold yellow. The text is set against a dark, textured background. On the left side, there is a photo of a man wearing a suit and tie, looking off to the side with a serious expression. The show's logo is displayed in the top left corner, featuring "THE CHASE JARVIS LIVE SHOW" in black text inside yellow rectangles. The entire graphic is framed by a yellow border, matching the color scheme of the text and logo.Gender Equality Isn’t What You Think (Here’s Why)
20250118_CJLIVE_LifeIsLong_Micro_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Signs You’re Drifting Away from Your Purpose (and How to Get Back on Track)
Keith Ferrazzi speaking on stage in front of a large, vibrant screen displaying multiple video call participants, with 'The Chase Jarvis Live Show' logo in bold yellow and black text on the left.Why You Should Never Lead Alone
Héctor García and Francesc Miralles smiling, with bold text in the center reading '4 Steps to Discover Your True Purpose' on a black background. Framed with a yellow border, creating a high-contrast, engaging design.Why You’re Not Finding Your Purpose
The show's logo is displayed on the left side, with "THE CHASE JARVIS LIVE" in bold black text inside yellow rectangles, stacked vertically. The right side of the image features a robotic figure, resembling a humanoid robot, meticulously working on a canvas. The robot is painting or drawing a grayscale portrait of a human-like figure. The robot's detailed mechanical components are visible, and the scene evokes themes of artificial intelligence, creativity, and technology. The background is minimal, allowing focus on the robot and its artwork. The composition suggests an exploration of AI's role in creative processes.Is AI the End of Creativity or Just the Beginning?

Daily Creative Projects

© 2024 Chase Jarvis. All rights reserved.