Posts

Mad Enough to Matter - Artists Who Walked Away, and What It Means for You

Image
  There’s a romantic myth that sits at the heart of art - the idea that to create something lasting, you must walk away from ordinary life. Leave the safety. Reject the expectations. Break from the path laid out for you. It’s a powerful image. The artist as outsider. The writer as exile. The painter as renegade. But how true is it? And more importantly - how useful is that idea for a modern artist trying to build a life, not just a legend? Let’s look at a few figures who, in different ways, turned their backs on convention in pursuit of artistic integrity. Not because they were reckless, but because they believed something else mattered more. Shakespeare - The Quiet Escape We don’t often think of William Shakespeare as someone who “walked away.” But in many respects, he did. He left Stratford Upon Avon - his home, his wife and family, his expected role - and went to London, a chaotic, competitive, and often dangerous city. Theater at the time wasn’t respectable. It was commercial, ...

Are We There Yet? The Art of Patience

Image
  Patience is one of those quiet virtues that rarely announces itself, yet underpins almost everything worthwhile in life. It does not shout. It does not demand attention. It simply endures, waiting in the background while the world rushes, stumbles, and often burns itself out in haste.  In a culture that rewards speed, instant results, and immediate gratification, patience can feel almost rebellious. Yet, when you look closely at how life actually unfolds - in our personal journeys, in world events, and especially in the craft of writing - patience reveals itself not as passive waiting, but as active, deliberate strength. In life, patience is often misunderstood as doing nothing.  In reality, it is the ability to remain steady while things take their natural course. We all want outcomes quickly. We want success now, answers now, change now. But life rarely works to our timetable.  Relationships evolve slowly, careers take unexpected turns, and personal growth happen...

Stupid Is As Stupid Does

Image
There’s a line that has lingered in popular culture for decades, delivered with quiet authority by Forrest Gump: “Stupid is as stupid does.” It sounds almost throwaway at first glance, like something simple enough to shrug off, yet it carries a depth of meaning that becomes more unsettling the longer you sit with it. Because what it really suggests is that stupidity is not a fixed state. It is not something you are born with or condemned to forever. It is something you enact. It is something you choose, repeatedly, often without realizing it. And that’s where things begin to get uncomfortable. We live in a time where information is more accessible than at any point in human history. Knowledge sits in our pockets, waiting to be accessed, explored, challenged, and understood. Yet, paradoxically, we also live in an era where deliberate ignorance has become fashionable. Not accidental ignorance, not a lack of opportunity, but a conscious turning away from learning. A refusal to engage. A ...

When Fear Shrinks The Mind

Image
Every now and then you notice a shift in the air. Not the kind of shift that makes headlines, but the kind that quietly changes how people behave. Writers feel it early because writers pay attention to people. We notice what they’re talking about, what they’re worrying about, and perhaps most importantly, what they’ve stopped being curious about. And lately something has changed. Across the world, the appetite for learning seems to be shrinking. Courses that once attracted enthusiastic students now struggle for attention. People who used to buy books about creativity, philosophy, science, or personal development suddenly hesitate. Not because they’ve lost their intelligence or their curiosity, but because their priorities have shifted in a much more primal direction. Food is getting scarcer. Fuel is getting expensive. The future feels uncertain. When people begin to fear for their security, education quietly slips down the list of priorities. And it’s not hard to understand wh...

The First Casualty of War is Hope

Image
  That phrase lands with a thud, doesn’t it? “The first casualty of war is hope.” It feels older than language, like something carved into stone by a survivor who has seen too much. Whether or not anyone famous said it first is almost irrelevant. The idea resonates because war does not begin with bullets or bombs. It begins with the slow erosion of belief – belief in reason, in compromise, in shared humanity, in tomorrow being better than today. Once hope goes, the rest follows with grim inevitability. War is often described as a clash of armies, strategies, and political interests, but emotionally and psychologically it is something far more intimate and destructive. It dismantles the quiet assumptions that allow ordinary life to function. People wake each morning believing their homes will still stand by nightfall, that their loved ones will return safely, that institutions exist to protect rather than harm. These are forms of hope so basic we barely recognize them. War strips t...

AI Is Here But... Aren't We Already The Robots?

Image
  Every few years humanity selects a new object of dread. We have worried about plagues, meteors, communism, capitalism, nuclear annihilation, sugar, gluten and now artificial intelligence.  The robots are coming, we’re told. The machines are learning. The algorithms are watching. Somewhere, apparently, a polite stainless-steel overlord is clearing its digital throat and preparing to reorganize civilization. But here is the uncomfortable possibility. The robots are not rising. They are simply observing. And the reason they can observe us so efficiently is because we have made ourselves spectacularly easy to predict. Listen carefully to your house for a moment. It beeps. It pings. It hums. The washing machine emits a chirp and you respond like a trained retriever. The microwave declares completion and you leap to attention. The car chimes because you drifted over a white line and you murmur an apology to the dashboard as though it has feelings. We like to imagine we are mast...

The Ten Point Outline - Why It's All You Need

Image
  Nearly thirty years ago I wrote a short article about outlining for screenwriters. I can still remember the mood I was in when I sent it off - mildly hopeful, mildly resigned, not entirely convinced anyone would care. It was a practical piece, nothing fancy, recommending a simple ten point outline as the quickest way to get a story moving. No labyrinthine beat sheets. No color coded index cards covering the walls. Just ten clear turning points that mapped the spine of a narrative from beginning to end. The article was accepted immediately and published by the London Screenwriters Workshop. It stayed on their site for over a decade, quietly doing its job, being read by writers who needed permission to keep things simple. I moved on to other projects, wrote books, built courses, taught thousands of students, but that little ten point outline kept humming away in the background of my creative life. And I still believe in it. In fact, I have just proved to myself - again - that it...