![]()
Hey friends, Chase here
Let’s talk about something that gets romanticized way too much in the creative world: inspiration.
We’ve been taught to wait for it. To trust it. To believe that the best work comes when lightning strikes, when the muse shows up, when the feeling is right. And while inspiration is real — and beautiful when it arrives — it’s also wildly unreliable.
That’s the trap.
If you build your creative life around inspiration, you build it around something you cannot control. And anything you can’t control is a dangerous foundation for a meaningful body of work.
This episode is about a better way. A steadier way. A more durable way.
It’s about why creativity doesn’t really grow from waiting for a feeling — it grows from compounding action. Small acts. Repeated over time. Daily deposits into the account of your craft. Tiny efforts that don’t seem like much in the moment, but eventually become impossible to ignore.
Because the truth is simple: you do not need to feel inspired to make something meaningful. You need to begin. And then begin again tomorrow.
🎧 Listen to the Episode Right Here:
The Real Problem With Waiting for Inspiration
At the start of the episode, I ask a question that’s worth sitting with for a minute:
When was the last time you made something just for the sake of making it?
Not for a client. Not for social media. Not because someone was expecting it. Not because it was due.
Just because you felt a pull to create.
For a lot of people, that question lands hard. Not because the desire to create is gone — but because somewhere along the way, the conditions got heavy. The pressure increased. The stakes changed. Creation stopped being play and started becoming performance.
And once that happens, inspiration starts to feel like a requirement. Like you need the right mood, the right window of time, the right environment, the right burst of confidence before you can begin.
But that’s backwards.
Inspiration is not the engine. It’s the byproduct.
The people who make meaningful work consistently are rarely sitting around waiting to feel magical. They’re working. They’re practicing. They’re trying things. They’re showing up on ordinary days. They’re making imperfect things and learning from the process. They understand that action creates momentum — and momentum often creates the feeling we mistakenly thought had to come first.
The Core Idea: Creativity Compounds
Most people understand compounding in the context of money.
You invest a little. That investment earns returns. Then those returns start earning returns of their own. If you stick with it long enough, the early effort starts to multiply in ways that seem almost disproportionate to the original input.
That same principle applies to creativity.
Every day you make something, you are making a deposit into your creative future.
You’re not just producing one photo, one page, one sketch, one draft, one conversation, one attempt. You’re building skill. You’re building confidence. You’re building pattern recognition. You’re building stamina. You’re building trust with yourself.
That one photograph teaches you how to see a little better tomorrow.
That paragraph in your journal makes the next paragraph easier to write.
That rough idea you abandon still shapes the way your brain approaches the next one.
None of it is wasted.
That’s important, because a lot of creative people dismiss the small efforts. They only count the big breakthroughs. They only respect the obvious wins. They think the work “counts” once it becomes polished, public, profitable, or impressive.
But real creative growth doesn’t work that way.
The invisible reps are where the change is happening.
Why the Early Returns Feel So Small
One reason people stop too soon is because the beginning is incredibly deceptive.
You show up. You try. You make the thing. And at first? Not much seems to happen.
You don’t feel transformed.
You don’t suddenly become excellent.
You don’t necessarily get recognition.
You may not even like what you made.
That’s normal.
It’s a lot like going to the gym. The first handful of workouts don’t make you feel powerful. Usually they make you feel sore. Awkward. Behind. You don’t see visible results yet, so your brain starts questioning whether the effort is worth it.
That’s exactly where most people quit.
Not because the process isn’t working — but because the results are still compounding beneath the surface.
The habit is the investment. The work is the interest.
And in the background, whether you notice it or not, something is building.
What Compounding Looks Like in Real Life
If you commit to a creative practice, the shifts usually happen in phases.
Day one: you make something and it feels mediocre. Maybe embarrassing, even. You put it out there anyway. Or maybe you keep it private. Either way, you made something. That matters.
Day 30: you’ve stayed with it long enough to feel a difference. You might not be able to articulate exactly how you’re better, but something is changing. You’re a little less hesitant. A little more practiced. A little more willing to hit publish, or share, or trust your instincts.
Day 90: now the changes are harder to deny. You’re solving problems faster. You’re making decisions with more confidence. The work has a different quality to it — one that may be difficult to name but easy to feel.
Day 365: this is where it gets almost shocking. You look back at who you were when you started, and it’s hard to believe that version of you made the early work. Your skills have evolved. Your identity has evolved. The way you think has evolved. Not because inspiration struck once in a dramatic breakthrough — but because repeated practice changed you.
That’s the magic most people miss.
The transformation doesn’t come from a single moment. It comes from stacking enough ordinary moments that they eventually become extraordinary.
Inspiration Follows Habit
This may be the most important idea in the entire episode:
Inspiration follows the habit. It does not precede it.
Read that again.
We tend to imagine that creative people feel inspired first, and then they make. But most of the time, the opposite is true. They make first. They enter the work first. They return to the practice first. And somewhere along the way, inspiration catches up to them.
The muse is far more likely to visit the person already working than the person waiting for certainty on the couch.
This matters because it gives you your power back.
If you believe inspiration has to arrive before you begin, you are helpless every time it doesn’t show up.
If you understand that inspiration often arrives after action begins, then you’re no longer blocked by your feelings. You can move anyway.
That doesn’t make the process robotic. It makes it resilient.
Why Daily Practice Changes More Than Skill
When people hear “practice,” they often think only about technical improvement.
Better camera work. Better writing. Better editing. Better design. Better speaking. Better execution.
And yes — practice absolutely improves craft.
But that’s only part of the story.
Practice also changes your mindset.
It changes your tolerance for uncertainty.
It changes your willingness to be seen before you feel ready.
It changes your ability to recover from a rough day or a bad draft or a failed attempt.
It changes your relationship to discomfort.
Over time, you become tougher. Not harsher. Not more closed. Just sturdier. You stop interpreting every hard day as a sign you’ve lost your way. You start recognizing resistance as part of the process rather than proof that you should stop.
That’s a deep kind of growth. And it’s only available through repetition.
What Most People Get Wrong About Creative Success
A lot of people think the biggest differentiator is talent.
Sometimes they think it’s access. Or timing. Or luck. Or confidence.
And while all of those things may play a role, one of the most underrated advantages in any creative life is much simpler:
The willingness to keep going.
Most people quit.
They stop when the returns are still invisible.
They stop when it gets repetitive.
They stop when they feel embarrassed.
They stop when the novelty wears off.
They stop when they don’t get immediate validation.
They stop when they confuse discomfort with misalignment.
But if you stay in the game — if you continue stacking daily habits, continuing to invest, continuing to return to the work — you start benefiting from a force that only rewards consistency.
You begin to outlast the people who were relying only on excitement.
You begin to build a body of work that couldn’t have been created any other way.
You begin to trust yourself not because everything feels easy, but because you’ve proven that you can continue when it doesn’t.
What You’ll Hear in This Episode
This is a short micro show, but it carries a big message. Here’s what to listen for:
- Why making something for play matters — and how easy it is to drift away from that instinct when everything becomes about output, audience, or obligation
- How the concept of compounding interest applies directly to creativity — and why small repeated actions build more than we realize
- Why the early phase of practice feels unrewarding — even when it’s working exactly as it should
- What happens at day 1, day 30, day 90, and day 365 when you commit to daily creative action
- Why inspiration is a result of the habit, not the prerequisite for it
- How persistence quietly becomes one of the greatest creative advantages you can have
Timecodes (So You Can Jump to What You Need)
- 01:47 – The opening question: when was the last time you made something just for play?
- 02:32 – Why we shouldn’t lean on inspiration — and what to lean on instead
- 03:01 – The compounding interest metaphor and why it matters for creativity
- 03:57 – The realization that creativity compounds just like money does
- 05:07 – Why the early returns are invisible, and why most people quit too soon
- 06:12 – What compounding creativity looks like at day 1, 30, 90, and 365
- 08:32 – The key truth: inspiration follows the habit
- 09:26 – The reminder that most people quit — and why continuing matters
- 10:50 – Stacking daily habits and applying financial wisdom to creative life
Read This If You’ve Been Waiting to Feel Ready
If you’ve been telling yourself you’ll get back to your craft once the spark returns, once life calms down, once you have more clarity, once you feel more confident — let this be your reminder:
You do not have to wait to feel ready.
You do not need a perfect plan.
You do not need ideal conditions.
You do not need a surge of confidence.
You need one small act of participation.
One honest page.
One photograph.
One sketch.
One idea written down.
One imperfect attempt.
Because that’s how momentum begins.
Not with certainty. With movement.
And often, once you reenter the practice, the feeling you were waiting for starts to reappear — not as a prerequisite, but as a companion.
Questions to Ask Yourself
If you want to turn this episode into action, spend a few minutes with these:
- When was the last time I made something purely for the joy of making it?
- Have I been waiting for inspiration instead of committing to a habit?
- What tiny daily action would count as a meaningful creative deposit right now?
- Where am I quitting too early because the results still feel invisible?
- What would change if I trusted repetition more than emotion?
- What kind of creator could I become in 30, 90, or 365 days if I simply kept going?
A Simple Practice for Rebuilding Momentum
If this episode speaks to where you are right now, here’s a simple way to put it into practice:
- Choose one small creative act you can repeat daily for the next seven days
- Keep the bar low enough to actually do it
- Do it whether you feel inspired or not
- Track your consistency, not your brilliance
- At the end of the week, notice what changed — in your skill, your mood, your confidence, or your willingness to begin
The goal here is not to impress yourself. It’s not to prove anything. It’s not to manufacture a breakthrough.
The goal is to remember that creative momentum is built, not found.
And once that momentum starts to compound, you’ll realize something powerful:
You were never actually waiting for inspiration.
You were waiting to trust the process enough to begin.
Until next time, make something for play, keep stacking the habit, and remember: don’t wait for inspiration.












