Saturn Returns with Caggie - 7.10 The Courage to Create with Aime McNee
Episode Date: July 3, 2023If you resonate with the struggles of procrastination, perfectionism, imposter syndrome or burnout then this conversation will be extremely beneficial. Caggie is joined by Aime McNee, a creative coach... and fiction author. In this episode they explore the beauty and vulnerability of ‘the creative’; the loneliness of committing to creativity, the shame and comparison creatives often face when straying away from the conventional 9-5 career and the liberation of choosing ourselves and our own path. Aime and Caggie discuss the many ways we often grapple with the dialogue of our inner critic and unpack the topic of ego, how individuals will often unknowingly cultivate a fear of success which is just as persuasive as our fear of failure. Even if you are not creative in your career, many of us have that inner critic which makes us doubt ourselves and stops us from going after our aspirations and goals. Aime shares her own experience with this and the tools she utilises to unlock the power to silence that voice in our head that says we are not worthy. --- Follow or subscribe to "Saturn Returns" for future episodes, where we explore the transformative impact of Saturn's return with inspiring guests and thought-provoking discussions. Follow Caggie Dunlop on Instagram to stay updated on her personal journey and you can find Saturn Returns on Instagram, YouTube and TikTok. Order the Saturn Returns Book. Join our community newsletter here. Find all things Saturn Returns, offerings and more here.
Transcript
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Hello everyone and welcome to Saturn Returns with me, Kagi Dunlop. This is a podcast that
aims to bring clarity during transitional times where there can be confusion and doubt.
Today I am joined by Amy McNee. I discovered Amy on Instagram through my wonderful friend Africa Brooke and it kind of arrived or Amy's work
arrived at a time in my life where to kind of add a bit more of a personal take I have been doing
a creative project that I haven't been really speaking about it's a music project which might
surprise many of you and I've always really struggled with
putting myself out there in that aspect of sharing myself and that sort of having that creative
expression. And so when I discovered Amy's work, I was instantly drawn to it. Now, Amy is a fiction author. She is also a creative coach and she puts a lot of
stuff out on Instagram that really speaks to the creative and the creative process about how we
struggle with things and these internal dialogues that go on. So when I spoke to her, it was a bit
like, as often these episodes are, a bit of a therapy session because
it was exactly what I needed. She called me out on a lot of stuff. So my point is the importance
of the creative self I've realized is so intertwined with our spiritual practice. I almost
view these things as one of the same. It's also my belief that we all have creativity. And when
we're young, when we're children, we are very free in our expression of that. We don't fear
judgment or ridicule. We just are. We're just playful. We're creative. We're using our imagination
all the time. And then it kind of gets beaten out of us as we go into school and a more linear, traditional way of thinking.
And it's more academic.
And unless it actually becomes what we do in our career, we abandon all these aspects of ourself.
And I believe that it's in this process that we feel a lack of connection to ourselves and that that is the gateway for our spiritual path.
So if you are feeling like something's missing, I would encourage you to obviously listen to this
episode and then ask yourself what aspects of yourself creatively have you been neglecting and is there something that you can do about that
in this episode we touch on some big themes that I think a lot of you will relate to and they really
hit me and that is procrastination perfectionism imposter syndrome and burnout and I admit that I oscillate between all of those things but Amy really unpacks what's
underneath it and it's so fascinating the way she explains it. I hope you enjoy this fantastic
episode with Amy and that it ignites something in you to step out of your comfort zone and be bold enough to embrace your creative path.
Amy, welcome to the Saturn Returns podcast.
Thank you so much, Kagi. Thank you for having me.
Are you joining us from Australia?
I am. Some of my last days here in Sydney, Australia. And then joining us from Australia? I am.
Some of my last days here in Sydney, Australia.
And then I'm coming over to join you.
For good?
For, we've said like a couple of years.
We'll see.
Oh, wow.
What made you move to Australia?
So I've got a funny little life popping around the planet.
My parents are just very spontaneous, beautiful adventurers.
And so when I was 16, they decided that we would go to Australia and that we would finish my
schooling here. And so I did, and then I met my husband and now I kind of want to, I want to go
back. And because of the beautiful work that I do as an artist, I can work from wherever I want.
And so, yeah, I'm going to go have like a country life where I write in my cottage for a little bit.
I love that. I've got to say though, I've always maintained my spirit home is Australia
and Sydney. I have such a strong connection to it. I went when I was, I think I was 10
with my family. We went for a month and traveled around and I just fell in love
with it. It was honestly like a soul connection. And so I've been many times and I would love
to spend a bit more time there at some point, but it is just very, very far.
It is. It is so far. Yeah. I must say I feel very clingy to Australia and this land right now
because I know I'm about to be taken from it.
It is incredible.
Like this is a beautiful place to live.
I'm excited people are going to be over here.
When do you move?
Next week.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
I know.
We're in a transitional stage.
And how old are you?
I am 31.
How old are you?
I'm about to be 34 in a matter of days.
Lovely.
What are you doing for it?
Are you celebrating?
I am.
I'm one of those people that usually doesn't do anything.
And then when the day comes around, I'm like, nobody loves me.
So I'm actually forcing myself to do dinner.
I'm not a very good organizer of things.
In fact, like I'm pretty sure I've done what we said before we were recording,
which is I've telepathically invited lots of people.
I'm not sure whether I actually have or told them what day it actually is happening on
or where it is or anything like that.
So, yeah.
It's going to come together.
You've given off birthday vibes.
Like people can feel that you want them to attend somehow that's what I'm thinking I discovered
your work on Instagram and I was it was through my friend Africa Brooke I love Africa and I just
was like it's just been very present in my own personal life and kind of viewing the world
and people this kind of idea of creativity what it means the hurdles we face the imposter syndrome
and you're like what you put out online and sort of working as a creativity coach which I would
love to kind of understand more of what that entails I just wanted to speak
to you about like the whole process of it all because I it's my belief that we all have our
creative self but it often gets sort of abandoned or put to the side because it doesn't necessarily
necessarily become our job or our career and often we we disregard that part of us which I think is
actually a really it's like a spiritual practice as well creativity in in many ways it is it is
innate it is I think I truly believe it's what we are here to do and when we move away from that or
we forget that that is what we're here to do it can feel like something
very very holy and like important is missing yeah what has your process been like kind of getting
into this work so I'm a fiction author by trade so I write historical fiction novels and I have for over a decade now. And as I have, you know, dared to tell stories,
I was just like, holy fuck, this is, I'm sorry, I did not ask if I could swear.
No, you can swear.
Okay, great. I am so lonely. This is such a, when we, you know, committing to your creativity and
deciding to create, it just, it reveals so much of our own insecurities, our own narratives
that have been holding us back. It reveals imposter syndrome. Like when we commit to creativity and
when we realize that we're here to create, it also unveils a lot of our own pain and creativity
forces us to look at some of our darkness. It also reveals a hell of a lot of our light,
but I think it does reveal a lot of what is not working for us. And I felt incredibly lonely in this process of trying to make art and trying to be creative and trying
to start a business. And I was like, I just, I need support. And so I feel like I kind of became
the person that I desperately needed when I was at the beginning of this journey, which was someone
to hold me and someone to see me and to someone to have conversations around what it means to be
creative and what being creative brings up for most humans which is what I mean like literally
I cannot it brings up everything and so my job as a creative coach is to look at what the creative
is moving through and what it is triggering like Like for me, and this is from the perspective of someone who wanted to be a full-time creative, it triggered
a huge amount of shame in me because I thought that I wasn't trying to be a real adult. Like
I thought I had failed at being an adult because I desperately wanted to be a creative. And, you
know, I had very little money at the beginning of this journey. I was in a lot of debt. I was
working in cafes, trying to pull together rent. And I was like, everyone else around me is doing the real adult
thing. They're being responsible. They're getting real jobs. They're moving on with their lives and
they're doing what's right. And I am here trying to tell stories and I'm delusional and I'm foolish.
And all of these narratives were coming up for me. And I just felt, and I still feel triggered
sometimes. Sometimes it still comes up. these narratives take such a long time to
deconstruct, but I felt like a child, like I was someone who just couldn't, couldn't properly
become an adult because I was so in love with creativity and I refused to live a life that was
devoid of it. And so that's my, a lot of my story and a lot of what creativity brought up for me.
void of it and so that's my a lot of my story and a lot of what creativity brought out for me I can relate so deeply to that and it was it's it's interesting because the way you kind of put
it into words it I also felt that sense that everyone was filing their life into some sort
of meaning and like progressing and getting stable careers and you know getting houses and stuff and
I was just there chasing this I remember someone
saying to me someone very close to me like stop with all these pie in the sky ideas I was like
they're not by the sky but then I also for me I was like am I being delusional is creativity not
really a proper thing to pursue and also we've fed this idea you know the struggling artists like
and we're also creative people are given very little education on how to actually craft that
into a business and not only that is there's a humongous industry or like all creative industries
there's a lot of people that take advantage of the creative yeah something I want to get into
because they're like okay there's a
lot of talent here that I can exploit that I can monetize so we'll sign them into something that
they don't fully understand because they don't have any money to like put their project out into
the world so we'll give them a little bit that they'll think's a huge amount on and then we'll
sign them up for 10 years and they'll have no autonomy over what they're doing. And it's like, if you actually start unpacking a lot of those industries, it's really quite awful what happens.
It's awful. We live in a world where the creative, and it's been like this for a long time,
like the creative is just not respected, not given the credit. Like creatives give literally
all the light to this world. We make such profound
change. We create people's lives. We like decorate people's lives with so much magic. We help people
see themselves. We help people feel safe. Like creatives are here doing absolute most, the most
generous and vulnerable thing that humans do. And we are constantly manipulated, undermined,
not taken seriously, made to feel shame because we're being childlike,
we're dreaming too big. Oh, you're not properly signed by the right people. Oh, you've got
scarcity stories. There's so many narratives that are interwoven in our culture that are there to
make creatives stay very, very small. And as I've realized this through my own journey and through
seeing so many creatives come across so many roadblocks that are keeping them small, that are keeping them manipulated, that are keeping them in systems, that are keeping them scared and shy and small.
Like I feel like I've kind of come into a work where I'm writing about and speaking about how creatives are here to rebel against these systems and they're here to take up space and they're here to make a very very new space and system for creatives because we can't keep going like this we have to self
coronate we have to take power we have to take up space without having to negotiate and without
having to make ourselves fit into shapes that that we aren't and also that's happening at a time where things are more accessible there is
another road that we can go down and I think people are waking up to that do you think that
there's what is the intention you think behind if there is one behind keeping creatives kind of
small yeah it's a really interesting thing um and I think about this a lot
like why we're the best like we are here doing such incredible stuff like why keep us small
and I think um if you look at like I mean you could get really nitty-gritty into it like the
industrialist kind of world that we've lived in with like the nine to five like corporate stuff
like keeping people in the you know keeping people in the, you know, keeping people in systems.
So, you know, you go into a job, you stay in that job for a certain amount of time.
There are levels that you can go up, but you can't kind of deviate from that system. Whereas the creative goes a whole new route and takes up space in their own way. And I feel like rebels
against the industrialist and some argue even like that capitalist way of system that we're
living in. We're doing something different. We're not way of system that we're living in.
We're doing something different. We're not playing the rules that we've been told.
I mean, you think about how much shame creatives feel for wanting to make art and for wanting to
do something different. Like there's clearly narratives here that are being fed to us that
are saying, don't step out of line. Like, why can't you just do what the other adults are doing?
And it's interesting that we threaten people in such a way. What do you think? Like, why can't you just do what the other adults are doing? And it's interesting that we threaten people in such a way.
What do you think?
Like, why do you think we threaten them?
I don't know.
It's just coming to my awareness fully because I think as a, you know, my whole life, I've
always been a very creative person in various mediums and the pain that I've experienced because of that because I think
also in twofold like one creative people tend to be very sensitive and you know they're quite
vulnerable to the world in a way because they're experiencing everything on a very deep level but
that's the beauty is they can alchemize that and put it into something
beautiful and kind of transmute it but the the struggle I felt to put stuff out into the world
to have the courage I would say that kind of stems from the fact that I wasn't brought up in a
creative fact like my family's not very creative so for me it always felt like that made me the black sheep and I kind of kept in like I always kept that side of myself quite hidden because I was like
it was so innate but it wasn't it wasn't pulled out of me it wasn't drawn out it wasn't like
you know let's all kind of sit around the fire and sing that's but I yearned for that and so I kept that part of me very
very private to the extent where I wasn't able to sing in front of anyone I wrote poetry my
whole life but I never never shared it with anyone I still very rarely do because it was like my most
vulnerable part of myself so that was more like on a personal level,
but now like moving through the world and see and being able to put things out, but seeing the sort
of challenges and the roadblocks along the way that are both sort of internal and external.
I think that it's just, you know, like you say, these systems that are around profit and people performing in a certain
way and staying in line means that it's not, it's not beneficial to those systems to empower the
individual. But I do feel that that's shifting because, you know, things being more accessible,
you can actually create your own community and bring something directly to them. So I wanted to talk to you about that, about like
this process of self-publishing, what has that whole experience been like? Because,
you know, I know for many authors or writers, it's like, and same for the music industry,
it's like when you're signed, you're accepted and you've made it. And that is the biggest
misconception because I know so many artists
that got signed and then got shelved and never put out music. They got in horrible deals and
it was just a mess. But then the sort of idea of self-releasing or self-publishing gets kind
of shunned as like, oh, well, you haven't really been. You haven't really done it.
Yeah. And what's that about? My gosh, it's so interesting. I mean,
I mean, there's so much to dive into here. This is a really big topic and we have to talk about
it because as you said, like the system is changing and these stories are slowly, but surely
dying. We have to awaken to the fact that we've been sold a narrative that says, um, artists will
only make it if they are chosen. We have to have external validation first in order for us to
thrive. We have to be picked by somebody else in order to get permission to take up space.
And creatives who self-give permission and just take up space without permission,
they're not legitimate. They haven't been picked. And we're not to take them as seriously.
And that's still very much part of the stories that we have today. I I am regularly taken, not taken seriously because I'm self-published.
No matter how well my self-published books do, no matter how incredible the community
I've created is, there's still that really strong narrative of you have to be picked.
But for me, literally the most empowering thing I've ever done is chosen myself.
And I think choosing myself before anybody else could choose me has paved the way for
an incredible creative career for me. I had to pick me before anybody else could choose me has paved the way for an
incredible creative career for me I had to pick me before anyone else could pick me and my validation
came before anyone else's but what does that mean to you when you say I had to pick me like what
does that actually mean in a spiritual internal sense but also like how that manifested in what you did, what actions you took?
Yeah. I mean, in a very practical sense, I chose to self-publish and, you know, I applied to
gatekeepers and I had been in negotiations with gatekeepers and I'd been continually rejected by
gatekeepers. And I kept, you know, I was growing an incredible community online and I kept being
like told by, you know, family well by my partner maybe you should
self-publish you have an audience here that you could publish too and I was like no that's not
legit no I can't do that I shat on it for so many years like I hated it I was like shut and it made
me really angry I was like why won't someone just see me I think the pain of the creative so often
is I want to be understood I want to be seen can someone please just fucking see me. And I think the pain of the creative so often is I want to be understood. I want to be seen. Can someone please just fucking see me and understand me? Like I have something incredible
to give. And when most creatives were in this cycle of rejection over and over again, because
we're told this is the only path to get success, to be witnessed, to be understood, we have to be
picked in order to be understood. But I think in a way I was rejecting myself every single time I chose
not to self-publish. I was not understanding myself. I was not seeing myself every time I
chose not to self-publish. And so I spiraled into this incredibly depressed, um, and I was already
really struggling with my mental health. Um, like I was, I wasn't giving myself the credit I deserved
and nor was anybody else. And I hit a point where I was like, well, if I'm not going to pick me, why would anyone else pick me? Like I have to back myself.
I do see myself. I see my worth. I know I'm a fucking fantastic storyteller. And so, you know,
picking myself, I call it like coronating myself. I chose to self-publish my books and it came with
a huge amount of narratives that were very challenging for me to negotiate, but I did
choose myself. And in a smaller way, like I choose myself every single time I choose to show up and share
something on social media. I choose myself right now as I choose to take up space and speak to you.
Like we can choose ourselves in small ways each day, but the big one for me was
publishing my first book and saying, well, I don't need you to pick me in order to take up
space and thrive as an artist because this world is changing rapidly
we are in a different culture and the gatekeeping systems need to start noticing that and they will
but it's taking their time not only notice but also like the the scaffolding of that is kind of
disintegrating yeah good that you know there shouldn't be this access point. I kind of described it when I
wrote my book, not in this context, it was more in the context of like,
when I was trying to put out music and stuff. And I felt like I was waiting at the gates
to be let into my fate, you know, and that there were these gatekeepers kind of saying
we don't get it we don't see it and like you say just desperately wanting to be seen and often
with creatives like so important to know that your vision is uniquely your own and then and when it
hasn't been materialized yet don't be disheartened that someone else cannot see it like if someone else
is like I don't get it or that wouldn't work you need to do this we need to do that like no
trust that your vision has chosen you but it's having that courage to actually put it out the
world and back it because that's the thing is what I think a lot of creatives like they might put stuff out of it and they then don't know how to like sell it you know I
I'm so many creatives I witness who are apologetically taking up space they're like
I've got some new music and I'm so sorry to bother you with this piece like I don't want to take up
too much space on your feed like I'm so sorry but I did make this would you like you don't have to would you I'm so sorry if you hate it and it's like and it's you
know again and like I totally resonate with this because what you're doing is so fucking vulnerable
to put yourself out there to put a little part of your soul out there in the form of your art
but it doesn't work and you deserve more and you're also going against a whole system so you're kind of you
feel like you're speaking to this mountain of being like I built this little hill
I know I love us I love what we're doing here because I think it is revolutionary I think when
we pick ourselves and when we take up space and it doesn't mean you have to avoid gatekeepers. I think going gatekeeper routes is a very,
it's still a way to go. I'm not judging it in any way, but I think the way we pick ourselves,
whether that be self-publishing or even just taking up space on social media, I love us for
doing that because we're reclaiming power, we're reclaiming agency, and we're picking ourselves
and we're seeing ourselves.
And every time we do it, we're saying to ourselves, I have value,
witness me, understand me. And we're trying to find that audience who can.
And also when you do it, you, you sort of are the example for others to do. And that's a beautiful part. Like I always try and remind creatives of that. I'm like,
when you show up, when you try to sell your art or when you just generously you know just share because you want to share you lead the way you
you're leading a part of this revolution of art of creatives taking up space and
and giving self-given permission how have you found it in terms of the process have you ever
found it lonely because I know like creativity can be quite a lonely path and
one of the advantages of having you know going a more traditional route let's say is you have
a team and more of a support system and you are doing it quite independently it's like you and
the voices in your head and you have to be mindful to give yourself those acknowledgements and those
moments and congratulate yourself on
your achievement rather than just berating which is you know can be a constant yeah
so what's happened to you um yeah so I this was my biggest excuse when people were like you should
self-publish I was like well I want a team I want to be supported I want to be held and what I was
saying was I want to be seen again like I just want to team. I want to be supported. I want to be held. And what I was saying was I want to be seen again. Like I just want to be seen. I want to be understood and I
want to have a team that helps me. So that was my big excuse for a very long time. And I had
what I was ignoring. And I think a lot of the time that excuse was an excuse not to pick myself.
Like I was afraid, I was upset that I hadn't been picked and I was afraid to pick myself
because in reality, um, I had the means to get a team. And I
think the reality is, is that it doesn't have to be a lonely process, like exclusively, like there
are ways to get help and support in a very practical sense as you move through this process
of self-anointing, self-choosing. Like I, you know, had an editor. I had someone who helped
me do all the boring crap of like figuring out my books. Like I, you know, had an editor. I had someone who helped me do all the boring crap
of like figuring out my books. Like I co-collaborated with, you know, a book cover designer. Like there
were so many people on this journey with me who supported me and helped me. We do not have to do
this alone. And choosing to go alone doesn't mean that you are on your own and we deserve support
teams. And this comes with, you know, an element of, of
financial privilege because I had money to invest in my team, but there were some things that I did
that were, that weren't financially expensive for me. And I chose to do it because I knew I deserved
my, my book deserved to have people back up, backing up around it and saying, yeah, this is
good. Let's get it now. And it didn't require being chosen for me to find that like I went and I said will you help will you help me
and I deserved it how did you seek those people out because I think again it's like that's the
traditional routes that people think are the only routes and when you're doing differently it's like
okay well how yeah how do you go about that the world is just the world is so exciting and
like when I like there's a lot of stuff that we can talk about as creatives that can feel very
like down the dumps but honestly there has never ever been a more exciting time for creatives like
this is our era it's our renaissance I'm so excited for us there is so many new things
happening out there for us there's editors like if we're speaking specifically for authors right here, there are freelance editors all around the place. And I looked up, like my book was like a
very raunchy. It was, had a lot of like, had a lot of gay relationships in it. And it was about the
church and it was very, and so I went and found an incredible gay editor who had grown up in the
Catholic church, who had so much information that
was directly linked to my book. And she edited my book and they're just online. And in terms of like
the practicalities of getting my book on, you know, in Amazon and blah, blah, blah,
there's people to do it. You can just search like my one, I'll give her a shout out. Her name's
Linda and she's from Bookboffin and this is her job. She just helps self-published authors get there.
But she does all the boring stuff for you.
She booked my audio book stuff.
She set up my, you know, my recording, everything.
She got everything done.
And there's a really cool resource for, in fact, it's a really good resource in general.
Crap, am I going to be able to remember what it's called?
To find illustrators for book covers, to find editors.
Why is it always just my memory at the moment?
It's a really, really good resource.
I'll send it to you if I remember after the podcast.
But there's so much stuff out there.
There's so many ways that you can get support without having been picked.
How liberating was that for you when you actually started bringing the team together and
bringing the product to life? Like what did that feel like? Really vulnerable, I won't lie. And I
think having people support me as someone who, this is the first time I did it, like I was like,
you know, I think, you know, I was still working through a lot of having just picked myself,
but I was like, oh, are they having just picked myself, but I was like,
oh, are they going to take me seriously? I was very worried that I would not be treated properly because I hadn't been picked by a proper gatekeeper. So it was a very nerve
wracking process for me. But as soon as I got to know them and had relationships with them,
and they back me so hard and they love my book so much. Um, and as I saw that, I, I just learned
to trust and it was very relieving. And I also felt a little bit coy, I think, because I was
like, my excuse for such a long time for not self-publishing was, Oh no, I want a team and
I'm not going to be able to get a team. And then I had this incredible team. Yeah, I was like, oh.
No, I'm like so supported.
And in terms of the coaching side,
what do most people come to you if there is like a common thread?
Yeah, there is, definitely.
And what is that?
Procrastination, perfectionism, imposter syndrome also also burnout um yeah so being a creative coach like I work with all forms of creatives
all forms of artists I do nothing really at all about like the craft like I'm not out here
teaching writing I'm not out here teaching anything other than the the crap that we just
come up against as creatives and the big four are perfectionism procrastination imposter syndrome
and burnout and they're all very interlinked yeah well let's unpack that because I definitely have
do all of these things how and you said that they're interlinked like from your experience how do they intertwine and
interact with each other of course perfectionism and procrastination nearly always go hand in hand
because when we have standards for ourselves that are impossible it is incredibly hard for us to
show up for ourselves um so when we ask ourselves to make perfect art that chances are is we're
going to find it very difficult to show up in a consistent pattern.
So that's often how perfectionism and procrastination interweave, but they also,
they like, they're very similar topics. I've written a book on both of them and they are distinct obviously, but they just keep coming into play with each other. Imposter syndrome,
again, is going to be incredibly linked with perfectionism because the fear of being found out, the fear of
being a fraud, the fear of someone discovering that you're not enough, again, is linked to this
idea that you should be more, this perfectionism idea that you're not enough, that it should be
in other way, that I have to be this way in order to be loved. I have to meet this standard in order
to find success. And the imposter syndrome is always
that fear of I'm not perfect and someone is going to discover it. So they are very interlinked there.
And again, if you're battling narratives like this, if every time you show up to the page,
you're thinking this isn't good enough. You know, it's just so hard to create when you have an
inner critic that loud and that demoralizing.
Then all three of them, of course, lead straight to burnout because creating while you're battling those sorts of narratives and that violent inner critic will exhaust you.
Procrastination will exhaust you.
And everybody always says, oh, I haven't even been creating.
You know, how can I be burnt out?
I haven't done anything.
All I've been doing is procrastinating. Procrastinating is like, I swear to God, 10 times more exhausting
than creating itself. Procrastinating is exhausting. And if you're in a bad pattern of it,
you will burn out. It's just too hard to keep that up. How do you help people get through
procrastination? Procrastination, from what I've seen and what I've experienced with
myself is a trust issue. You don't trust yourself and rebuilding trust, very baby steps each day in
small ways has been the only way I've really seen like relationships with self-repair.
You don't trust yourself to show up. And that is so painful because it's you. I often have this like, um, like little metaphor talking about, like, if you had a friend and you were like,
let's meet up for coffee. And they just didn't show up. You'd be like, what, why? And then if
you did it again and they didn't show up, you'd be like, what, why? And then if you did it again and they didn't
show up, you'd be like, okay, well, like, do you have a good excuse? They might have a good excuse.
You know, you could give them a lot of rope. You could give them 10 times. Okay, I'm going to meet
you up for coffee. At the 10th time, you're probably going to be like, well, I'm not really
going to make coffee plans with you ever again, am I? Because this is fucked. But the problem is,
is that you can't like break the relationship with yourself. You're always with you. Like you can break off relationships with flaky friends, but you can't break off a relationship
with your flaky you. And it comes to such, it makes for such a difficult lived experience
because you do not trust your own word and retrusting it and showing that you can show
up for yourself, showing that you can show up for your own art happens slowly. It happens in really, really small expressions of action.
Like what? I think this is how it interlinks with perfectionism. The perfectionist says,
oh my God, I'm procrastinating so much. So I'm going to show up five hours tomorrow. I'm just
going to write my book. Okay. I'm just going to write it. It's going to, I'm going to do like
3000 to 5,000 words. And then you show up and you don't do it. And then you've betrayed
yourself again. Right. It's a, it's a pattern of self-betrayal. And then you're like, well,
I don't trust myself. Okay. Okay. Well then tomorrow, and you get really big and, you know,
chemical rushes when you promise yourself big things. So it feels really good in the,
in the moment I'm going to show up tomorrow and I'm going to do it even bigger this time,
because I fucked up so many times in the past. And again, this pattern of betrayal just keeps happening.
We have to baby ourselves. And it really hurts the ego, but I'm talking about, I want you to
show up for five minutes tomorrow and I want you to look at the document you're working on. And I
just want you to write a sentence. Then I want you to do it the next day too. I want you to do it three to four times a week. And once you've done that,
you're going to prove to yourself that you can show up. And then I want you to very, very slowly
increase it. We ask so much from ourselves and we are constantly setting ourselves up for failure
and self-betrayal. And we could just do loads less and still be very successful and
we could fulfill promises and we could repair relationship with ourself.
I think a couple of things that I want to touch on within that and one is
you know we want to say yes to all the things whilst also doing the creativity and I know I'm guilty of
being like yes I'll write five hours of this that day and when I was doing the book I would do that
and I would constantly set myself up for failure and I I did burn out because I was trying to
manage everything else and maintain my relationships and show up in that way and then not having enough time for me and I do feel that
I'm probably still slightly guilty of not actually giving myself targets that are achievable so I
never get that sense of satisfaction so I wanted to kind of unpack like because the big thing here
is really boundaries right yeah you need to be able
to say no yes especially if you're a people pleaser and so many creatives are we're so sensitive
because we're so I think we're so sensitive we're so attuned to what's going on in our world like
I don't know it feels like we have like a softer more permeable membrane between us and what's
going on outside and it allows us to alchemize our world into art, but it also means that we're
very sensitive to what's happening in other people's lives and what's happening around us.
I think so many of us are people pleasers. And that means that it's very easy for us to
deprioritize art at a rapid rate when people ask us from things. And no one's going to ask us to
write our books. No one's going to ask us to write our books
no one's going to ask us to do our art and we have to ask us to do our art and again that's that
trusting like you know not only do we not trust ourselves we're not prioritizing ourselves and
our self our relationship with ourself just deteriorates and deteriorates and deteriorates
when we don't prioritize these things and it's so painful that piece around priority not just prioritizing ourself but prioritizing
our creativity really kind of hits me because I think that like even when I got when I've had
really important whether it's literal work creativity or just like something I really
want to do it's always the bottom of the pile and it always gets kind of shoved down and I think for people
listening whether or not you're actually pursuing a creative career I believe that actually like
accessing our creative self is so important for our overall well-being collected it's so important
okay we we just we're here to make and in We, we just, we're here to make, and in so many different ways,
like we're here to turn nothing into something. It's just like, I just feel like it's what humans
are here to do. Like if you watch what you're doing throughout the day, we're just making,
we're creating, that's why we're here. And again, like when we deprive ourselves of that, when we
deprioritize that, when we say this isn isn't important we're saying I'm not important and my purpose of being here isn't important I think it's really
I think it's more serious than we realize um yeah I can't even fathom
say like even the idea of thinking or saying to myself like this takes priority because it's
important to me makes me feel a bit uncomfortable.
It's sick, yeah.
I mean, it's a big, big sign that that's your work,
like that's so important for you.
And I understand like you haven't been taught to prioritize that, like none of us have,
but I've like shamed my creativity.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, and it'd be interesting to like explore why.
Shame and creativity just so frequently go hand in hand it's so interesting and I just I'm very interested as to why this has
happened to us because it is so deeply sad and I think about all the art that we haven't seen
I think about all the art we haven't seen from you Kagi because you keep deprioritizing it and
it is literally heartbreaking like the stuff that you won't be able to make or won't be able to give
people because you keep betraying yourself and betraying us inadvertently by deprioritizing this.
Oh my God. I had someone send me a message not like a few months ago and
she just was like I've just felt this random call to message you and I just wanted to say she was
like why aren't you releasing more music and I was like um I just find it quite hard and I've got a
lot of things going on and she was like okay I'm just gonna say that she was like you because you feel it needs to be
perfect aren't putting it out to the world but you're actually being really selfish in that
because you're depriving people that get a lot of joy out of it and she was like it's your
imperfection that connects with people it's not the fact that it has to be this like fully because
I think that's the thing that gets in the way for me and I'm sure for a lot of people it's like you I want to put things out into the world but I also want to avoid criticism
I don't want anyone to tell me that it's awful or that it's shit and I think because I've had to
navigate that and all creatives do because there's people showing creatives they do they criticize
like there's so many people out there. And also the
industry is kind of built on this, as soon as you put it out, you're going to be reviewed and it's
going to be assessed and you're going to be judged. So that's a very real thing that for a
very sensitive person to have to endure feels too bloody painful. Yeah. This is why so many of us
are perfectionists because not only we have to be sensitive in order to be artists, but in order to be artists, we have to withstand criticism. We have to withstand being misunderstood. And there's no getting around this. And I don't want to modicoddle any artist and say, oh, you know, it's not that bad. Like people will misunderstand you. I had a post that went viral like the last few weeks and the audience, like it's millions and millions of people have
seen it. And it's, I've been so deeply misunderstood and trying to cultivate a sense of safety
as I am being misunderstood has been such an incredibly important practice for me because
I'm an artist and I'm going to be misunderstood.
I am also in so many ways seen and understood
by so many people.
And it is such a fucking delight
to be witnessed in that way.
But I am also going to be misunderstood.
And how do we create a sense of safety when this happens?
So how do I make sure that my body feels safe
when I'm misunderstood?
How do I make sure I mentally process it?
I have very thin skin. I've safe when I'm misunderstood? How do I make sure I mentally process it?
Like I have very thin skin.
Like I've cried and I'm allowed to cry and that's good.
I can process it.
Like I can make sure that I'm not trying to squish any feelings. Like I'm allowed to feel all these feelings of being misunderstood, of like some outrageous
criticism.
But how can I make sure that I, at the end of the day, still say, well, I, it doesn't really
matter. I'm still going to make stuff. I'm still going to write. I'm still going to show up. And
that's been cultivating a practice for me that has meant that perfectionism has no fucking place in
my life because perfect art is incredibly selfish. The pursuit of perfect art is incredibly selfish.
And I have no desire to go back into that pattern
of creation so I've got to make sure that I'm okay with what happens when I am misunderstood
and what did that do you mind me asking what was the thought that was misunderstood and how
and how was it oh it's just so silly like I guess because so much of my work that I share online
it's um like very uh distilled thoughts that have come
from much larger thoughts. And often the nuance is missed. It was talking about how creatives
don't always need to be visible on social media. And people came to me saying that I
am basically like hamstringing creatives and that I'm,
like hamstringing creatives and that I'm um honestly some of it was nuts that I'm basically making creatives be poor that creatives if they
listen to this message that they're going to be you know deeply harmed and that I'm promoting
people to stay hidden and that I'm basically giving permission for creatives to never be
witnessed and like people have made you know like long posts about
how this is like toxic to the creative world and like you know it's fucking nuts and like
well this is just lol like hilarious because I knew and I backed myself I knew that what I was
that wasn't what I was saying obviously um but I still had to go through the process of making sure that I felt safe being misunderstood
I think the the weird sort of good thing about the fact that that is the world that we live in
that people can go off on one to someone that's clearly trying like making a positive my whole
life is about making creatives feel seen that that just in a weird way it's kind of like it's easier because you realize how
ridiculous it is and it was so stupid just one like very articulated kind of piece that was a
criticism it might feel a bit more jarring but when it's just so it's just so many people that
are clearly quite like unhinged just just projecting their own shit on whoever they can
and guising it as like virtuous.
It's like, don't even let that penetrate what you feel.
Yeah.
And it's interesting, like that experience has been great for me.
Like it has honestly been great for me.
It's just, it's reminded me of my strength.
It's reminded me of how much I see myself.
But similar things like, you know, people people some people really don't like my books
khaki like some people really don't like them because they literally just think it's a bad book
and like getting okay with that yeah because the sort of paradoxical thing about that is
as someone that really tried to be for everyone for a big part of my life when I then realized that I
actually had no idea who I was because I'd been shaped to be anchored and grounded in one version
of me and then be just like that. It's a weird sort of bittersweet victory because you're like,
oh, that feels uncomfortable, but also at least I like me. I'm actually doing something for me now, not for everybody else.
I think this is where the power of picking yourself first actually comes into play because
I already picked myself. Like if I had been picked by a gatekeeper and then I had to come
to terms with people hating my book, I'd never have picked myself. I never backed myself.
And so I'm trying to always go off external validation. And so having this kind of starting point or foundation of this all began
because I chose me and I said, I see you and I think you have something really fucking cool to
give the world. And having that as my foundation really helps me because I'm not constantly relying
on that external validation. And it took a long time to get there like a long
time and it was an incredible amount of inner work and mental health work and spiritual work
but it set me up to a place where I can handle it and I'm okay with being
misinterpreted and again like I will cry about it that doesn't mean I'm not okay.
Yeah I think that's an important distinction it's not like you you've suddenly become not impacted yeah and what about
the ego and how that kind of plays into this whole process because that can be a tricky fucker
well the ego is I mean can the ego and perfectionism are just some besties right like
that I went yeah it's it's a lot like it infiltrates a lot of places you've got to have
them in check because they could rule the show especially and interestingly after success um
and I was having a really big discussion the other day about what people fear about success and and
I often see in creatives that much more than fearing failure, people fucking terrified of success.
One of the big fears is I'm afraid that I'm going to get really carried away with my success and my
ego is going to rule the show. And I think it's a really interesting fear and people are not going
to like me and I'm going to be a dick and all of a sudden success is going to change me and my ego
is just going to go out of control. It's a real fear that people have um and I think that's really interesting like why I also
think there's I've sort of analyzed that and I I feel that the fear of success also lies in the
fact that there's a safety and a familiarity in like where you're at and if you up level to a place of success
you then have to maintain that because you know that there's a floor that's lower and you don't
want to go back yeah that's really hard with creativity as well it's your only it's like good
as your last project you have to keep creating and so you've you know when you start getting
that success to to keep the momentum
and then people are like, would rather sort of avoid beginning. Yeah. Yeah. The lists of people's
fears around success were super interesting. And I think a lot of them were ego related.
Um, what if my second project isn't as successful as my first, You know, well, I would have to not play small anymore
if I was successful.
People find, you know, failure weirdly comforting
because it means that they can give up.
And yeah, it's interesting how triggering success can be
and also how little we talk about it.
We're always talking about how to prevent failure and how to manage failure and how to move through failure and of course it's a really
important conversation but there's just no one out there prepping for success and like there's a lot
of prep to do there's yeah on like how to manage success yeah and you know how many creative people
like can't handle it really yeah exactly there's a lot of work to do I think to live an abundant creative life
and I mean like abundant as in like successful but like joyful because I think a lot of people
can like kind of like jackhammer their way to creative success but they're very unhappy and
again they're on this like kind of addictive train of needing more and more external validation
and like trying to keep up momentum the exhaustion
the burnout I've got to keep going what if this next one isn't as good what what if I fall back
to there like it's exhausting and I don't want to be that sort of successful creative at all
um and so doing the work beforehand and doing the work during this journey is like in my opinion
crucial and not often spoken about well I guess it ties into that pick me energy, doesn't it as well?
Yeah, yeah.
It's that difference between, you know, we do as artists obviously crave being seen
and we need a degree of external validation to actually have that success
and have it be brought to life.
But we also, if that's out of balance with like seeing ourselves
it will also be destructive even if from the outside eye you're killing it yeah it's perfectly
said there's a balance that needs to be kept yeah how do you sort of maintain that balance
how do you sort of maintain that balance now? I journal like journaling is at the root of all of everything I do and it's this dialogue with myself and it is like like it's literally just
me on the pages with me chatting through things talking through narratives rewriting narratives
um like everything changed for me I was was incredibly, incredibly depressed. I had just gotten fired. I was in like tens of thousands of dollars worth
of debt. Um, I was in deep shame because I thought that I was so childlike for wanting to be a
creative and I decided, well, fuck this. I've got no job. I'm just going to try and journal each
morning. And I took myself out, wrapped up more credit card debt with a coffee on the card.
And I journaled every day and I've journaled every single day of my life since that day. It was like five years ago,
a few days ago. And everything changed from that point because I could witness the stories I was
telling myself and I could witness my inner critic and, you know, like just reading what I wrote to
myself on the page. Like I just let my inner critic like take the pen. Cause I was going to
say, you put up something recently about, you people ask people often like how do you journal you know
how do you begin one link did is there a particular process or way that you go about
I just journal like an a4 page um so it's like enough so that I can get through some bullshit
but not too much that it's intimidating. And I literally just transcribe what's happening in my mind at the time. So it's often just like,
at the beginning, it's just like the most random things like, oh, I slept like this. Oh,
this pen isn't working very well. Oh, James is really annoying me, blah, blah, blah. And then
slowly I'll just see what's happening. And eventually it will just start pouring out
what's actually underneath all of this. And then at the end, I do this practice that I
call mothering myself. And it's like this higher voice. And I just treat myself like a fucking
precious little treasure. And this voice, I credit to a lot of this changing of the narratives. Like,
so I'd witnessed my inner critic at the beginning of this journey. And it was just disgusting,
Kagi. Like I reread some of it and it was like, I was so, so cruel to journey. And it was just disgusting, Kagi. Like I reread some of
it and it was like, I was so, so cruel to myself. And I was like, you're a piece of shit. You're so
lazy. You've got so much debt. You're, you know, and then at the end, I just chose to like, just
take care of myself. And this voice would be like, Oh my God, baby, you're doing so well. And I'm so
proud of you. And I know this is really hard, just receiving so many stories that this is not enough that wanting to be creative is delusional, but I believe in you. And I'm so proud of you. And I know this is really hard, just receiving so many stories that this is not enough, that
wanting to be creative is delusional, but I believe in you and I'm so proud of you.
And I believe that we've got this and it's very soft language.
It's like a reparenting technique, essentially.
And I just got my little inner child who was just having a major fucking freak out because
she thought that she'd done everything wrong.
Just like taking her in my arms and telling her that she hadn't done anything wrong at all. And that she like was doing everything right. And that she
was chasing something so innate in her and that she was going to, and that woman, you know, that
woman who was so sure everything she was doing was wrong. Let me hear today where I'm like moving to
a fucking English cottage where I'm going to write my novels. You know, I just bought
a mini, like who is it? Like I, she got me here, you know, and it was through the pages
that she got me here because I rewrote narratives that were suffocating me.
That is so powerful. Thank you so much for sharing that. I think that's like the most,
that's the thing. It's like, we have all all we need it's just getting the tools yeah it really for me
all my work or that like when I do creative coaching with my membership like I use journaling
because I just feel like getting to witness the way you speak to yourself on the page like I think
too many of us are walking around completely unknowing about what dick we're being to ourselves
in our own heads because we're so used to it yeah and actually seeing stuff on the page and being like able to
explore and get curious around what's happening is revolutionary and it changed my life yeah
because also I think the you know the themes that we mentioned the procrastination the burnout the
perfection all intertwined in in that in a critic but because like you say we walk around
having conversations being polite to other people and then being like why do I feel so exhausted why
was I not able to do anything productive today and it's like you don't acknowledge the way we're
actually communicating to ourselves it's incredibly confronting but also a cathartic thing because
then you can start that dialogue of reparenting but you can only do that when you're really brutally honest with yourself yes and I like that you call it
dialogue because it has to be a dialogue and a lot of people I know like I'm journaling I'm
writing all my bad thoughts on the page but I'm like well you got to do something else you can't
just write the bad thoughts there has to be an alchemization here because you'll just keep buying
into it you'll just keep believing it if it's all that you let out um it has to be a rewrite and the rewrite is uncomfy like you might not feel so
great about it because you won't be buying into it yet but this is the magic this is literally
rewriting your pathways this is your new life on the pages before i the process has to be slow
and steady and i think we live in a world where we love a quick fix we
love a like spiritual bypass and just get to that point it's like no this is about the daily
discipline and kind of over time creating those solid foundations a hundred percent and I think
when you ask me what to do I'm like I feel like you should be my coach
because all the kind of creativity stuff when you're like you haven't put stuff out I'm like
I know and I can't you know what I do as well I'll like get 90 percent of something done and then tell
myself every reason why I can't do that final 10 percent right now and then we'll just honestly
it's like madness the things that I sit on because
I'm like oh it's just not the right time or oh no I can't find I don't know who to mix who's
gonna mix this project right now and like yeah it's it's bad I want to say a few things first
of all that 90% thing is really really fucking rife the the oh I Oh, I'm not, I'm done, but I'm not quite done. So I'll just put it aside.
Like, fuck. And so I want to say that like, I have, this is why like being a creative is the
most vulnerable job. And even though I feel like we can feel this pressure of, Oh, I'm got so many
stories and narratives to work through. Like we have to work through them with like the craziest
amount of compassion. And again, that's why I use that mother work through. Like we have to work through them with like the craziest amount of compassion.
And again, that's why I use that mothering voice.
Like right now, I would like scoop up your inner child and be like, oh my gosh, you're
doing so well.
And I know you've got all these things you want to do.
And that's so exciting.
And we're going to get to them.
But I just want you to take like a really deep breath and just know that I'm already
so proud of you.
Like making sure that even when we get really excited
and overstimulated and like, oh my God, we've got to go.
We've been fucking around for too long
that we bring that kind of central nervous system
to a relaxed place and remind ourselves
that we're already enough.
We don't have to prove ourselves
and that we're already doing so well.
That's such a good reminder.
And I think so important for our audience listening.
I think that's a beautiful place to end. there any kind of other if you know I think there's been
so much wisdom and you know guidance in this conversation but is there anything else you'd
like to leave our listeners with oh no that was I think that was a beautiful place to leave it
like you're already doing so well well thank you so much Amy for joining
my absolute pleasure thank you
I hope you enjoyed this conversation between myself and Amy some of my takeaways from it were
you know this conditioning the societal belief that creatives aren't going
to be successful or that it's not a real job and if we kind of step away from that conventional
nine-to-five what does that what does that mean and what does that look like but also how this
is intertwined in the liberation of choosing ourselves and walking our own paths. Regardless of whether you consider yourself a
creative person I think we all have to face our own inner critic from time to time and what I found
helpful about this conversation is it's in recognizing that we all have it and that's why
Amy's work is so powerful because she just gives these really to the point direct notes on the
things that I think we're often thinking
but perhaps they're not fully in our awareness because they're just spiraling in our own heads
and we often think that we're the only ones that think or doubt or feel that way but actually it's
part of the creative process. I hope this conversation has inspired you. I found it incredibly inspiring and I'm
actually going to be meeting up with Amy because I think she was like, okay, you've got some shit
to get through. So watch this space, everyone. I hope that I, you know, get out of my own way
and deal with my own BS so that I can actually bring you guys more
creativity and I hope that you will do the same. If you enjoyed this episode I would absolutely
love it if you could spend a minute, half a minute and go and write us a review on Apple.
I personally love reading them. If that's not
enough of a reason, it also helps us get discovered by like-minded people. And the
more we grow this podcast, the better and bigger our guests can be so we can continue to bring
wisdom and joy into your ears every week. So please do that. And thank you very much for listening.
And as always, remember, you are not alone. Goodbye.