Recession Or Depression – Keep The Creative Alive
Life is a creative endeavor.
No denying it. The economy is in a disastrous nosedive. Some call this a recession while others argue it is a depression. I wonder – can it possibly matter?
We can say it’s a market downturn, a correction, a slump. For that matter, we can call it Joseph, Mary, or Marvin. Regardless of its name, the situation makes a deep impression on our bank accounts, our options, and our moods.
I consider the money game much as I do football. My savings run up and down the field and, depending on the economy and the market, I win some points and lose some points. Clearly the past months represent a long dry spell for my team. Indeed it has been a while since we registered on the scoreboard. That can take a toll on my optimism.
I remember a crisp autumn day in 1968. I tuned my transistor radio to listen to the University of Michigan game. The Wolverines were battling the fearsome Buckeyes of Ohio State. I cannot remember who won the game, but I distinctly remember the announcers’ emphasis on the game’s emotional momentum. It seems there is more to football than muscle and brawn. As with most human activity, football teams fall prey to collective optimism and/or discouragement.
And so it seems with the economy. The global team – lenders, investors, consumers, and employers – lost that collective sense of confidence. The momentum shifted to an unseen opponent who is carrying the ball. As the scoreboard grows increasingly lopsided, our team’s heart grows heavy. We begin plodding down the field carrying a sense that we may never reach the playoffs.
Original thinking cowers in an atmosphere of fear and loss. Yet without our imaginations we are truly lost. Now is when every player needs to wear the creative helmet. We need imagination and a “yes” attitude to win. Giving up on your creative game makes no sense at all.
Maybe you cannot creatively restore your 401K during this depressed, repressed progression. Some things may be beyond your control. But the quality of your life is not based on the size of your wallet. Consider ways to escape feeling oppressed. Find strategies to decompress. Give voice to the creative every day.
Writing will help your mind stay limber, bright-spirited, and open to unseen solutions. Neuroscience shows that both reflective and creative writing call on the brain's right hemisphere. The right-brain knows how to find patterns in complexity. It finds solutions that the logical, more rigid left-brain cannot see. Taking time to write a poem or a journal entry will help clear your head of the worn-out and predictable. Writing will shift the momentum in your direction.
To keep your creative alive, consider Blue Plate Special: Lunchtime Poems and Noontime Notes. This and other class descriptions appears in the section above.