Time and the part-time artist

I suspect I’m not the only one who experiences the problem of feeling there is a shortage of time and creating art. Currently, I work a 40-hour-a-week job and create art in my “spare” time. Lately, it seems that “spare” time is virtually nonexistent. I’m up every day at 4 AM, the three S’s, make coffee, and sit to write a blog entry. Then it is off to the “job”. My so-called 9 to 5 isn’t mentally taxing but it is often physical. By the time I get back home at about 3:30 PM, I’m just ready to vegetate. There are days when I force myself to come in and work on some projects but over the years what I have discovered is that creativity just can’t be forced. It doesn’t happen when you sit down and say, come on come up with some great art, at least for me.

I know it is difficult to say, to hell with it I’ll just quit my job and work making art full-time. Most of us have commitments and bills to be paid. We also know it is tough to break into becoming a successful well-paid artist. So, what is happening for me, is that I have worked at a job for the past 50 years or so and I’m in a position to retire and devote more time to creating art. My health is still good, but my mind, well sometimes it wanders, oh look a squirrel, and then suddenly a random song or line from a movie pops out.

It’s never too late to start creating art. If you are passionate, I know that word gets bantered about far too often, about creating art take advantage of it, and do as much as you can as soon as you can, but I have also seen many people get burnt out when working a “day job” and creating photographic art. Many I have known over the years are no longer photographers or, as I have done a few times, let their equipment sit for weeks or months at a time. This is the quandary of the part-time artist. So much to create and often so little time.

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