Printable grocery coupons




Today at Momscape.com: Seven Soul-Nurturing Suggestions for Busy Women | The Art of Rest


Momscape.com
Momscape
Coupons | Product Reviews | Contests | Articles | Blog | Search | Subscribe
Family Fun | Parenting Tips | Romance | Health & Fitness | Organic Living | Weight Loss | WAHMs

Welcome Momscapers!

momscape
Momscape.com is an award winning online magazine featuring a panel of renowned authors and experts writing on conscious & creative parenting, family fun, romance, travel, health & fitness, weight loss, and more.

You'll find printable grocery coupons as well as hundreds of  online coupons and family travel discounts, too.

Find us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter

 



Today at Momscape:


Family Fun

Activities & Crafts

Family Travel Deals

Free Scrapbooking Ideas

Parenting Articles
Baby Tips

Toddler Tips

All Parenting Articles

Inspiration/Essays

Favorite Parenting Experts
Joanne Baum

Jody Johnston Pawel

Relationships
Marriage

Romance

Friendships

Health and Fitness
Fitness Tips

Natural Living

Nurturing Your Spirit

Weight Loss

Professional
Family Manager Tips

Home-Based Business

Online Coupons
Today's Favorite Coupons

All Online Coupons by Store
 
All Online Coupons by Category

Printable Grocery Coupons

Product Reviews
Momscape's Favorite Things (Blog)

Top-Rated Mom Product Reviews

About Momscape
Subscribe
Site Map
Links
Link to Us
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service
About us
Contact Us

 

Increase Creativity! 8 Quick Ways to Nurture Your Creativity

by Suzanne Falter-Barns

One of the really great things about creating your dream are those times when you go into a trance. That's when you look up after three hours and discover that the rest of the world has gone to bed while you've been creating your work of genius. And this is when your creativity is at its absolute sparkling best.   Here are some elements you can put in place that will help you slide into that exalted place more easily, and give yourcreative spirit the nurturing it needs.

1.  Turn off the news and listen to music instead.
The creative part of your self is sensitive, easily upset by the negative stream that passes through the news desks of our nation. Therefore, limit or completely turn off the news. Once you wean yourself of it, you'll find that you really don't care what the headlines are. If you live alone, and like to have television or radio 'noise' in the background to keep you company, play music, books or poetry on tape, or positive talk radio.  

2.  Keep your work nearby.
Ideally, you'll have an office with a door that's right in your home. That way, if inspiration strikes while you're folding laundry, you can put down the sheets, walk upstairs and do something about it. (I was cooking dinner when I got the idea for this article.) When recording artist Stevie Wonder is on the road, he has a crew member whose sole job is to set up his keyboards wherever he is. In an interview with The New Yorker, Stevie stopped himself several times to go off and compose when a melodic theme popped into his head, right there in the middle of a backstage dressing room.  

3.  If you take a break, stay 'fuzzy'.
There's a certain fuzziness that comes with creating -- a loose-in-your-joints feeling that results from letting the creative flow pass through you. By all means try to hang on to this feeling, even when you need to take a break. Don't interrupt it with a lot of hard-edged activities like business calls, important decision-making, or reading financial mail. Instead, drift around, read a magazine, a book, or a letter from a friend, turn on music, play a game with your child. or cook a little food.

4.  Always act on your instincts.
This is how some of the best research for your project will get done.  Call up that friend whose name keeps floating across your mind; take that flyer that seems intriguing for reasons you can't quite figure out. If you listen to your instincts the first time, it's really much easier to get things done.

5.  Keep note-making material handy wherever you are.
There should be small pads of paper, notebooks, or personal messagers sprinkled throughout your life. Put them in useful places like your car, the bathroom, and beside your bed, where the best ideas often strike.  Use a personal messager or digital recording device to keep track of your ideas. This is a neat little recording gizmo often no bigger than a credit card, that can record 25 or even a couple hundred messages at a time … whenever and wherever the mood strikes. Some of them even come on key rings; many cost less than $10.   When you have a moment, you can copy these messages into your computer, daily planner, notes, or wherever the information needs to go.  

6.  Get out and see other people's work in your field.
Read trade journals, see exhibits or attend conferences. Get to know who and what is out there. Not only will this fill your head with ideas and ways to do things differently, it will give you inspiration on many fronts, including how to make your own work even more distinctive.  You'll also learn things about your business you simply can't learn any other way, and possibly find your way to valuable collaborations or business partnerships.  

7.  Live and work in a beautiful place.
There is no substitute for natural beauty -- even if it's a sunset seen from an apartment on the twentieth floor. Having a view of nature, one way or another, is a wonderful way to keep the spirit flowing through your door and into your work. If you can't arrange a river view, put something natural in your surroundings that speaks to you, even it's a window full of house plants. Your soul will thank you, and your work will thrive.

8. Indulge in the other arts.
For decades, Woody Allen spent every Monday night playing his clarinet with a bar band at an Upper East Side jazz club in Manhattan. Steven King and Amy Tan have been known to play in a rock band called The Remainders. Michelangelo wrote sonnets and love songs, and even Paul McCartney has had exhibitions of his paintings. Spending some time fooling around with other forms of creative expression is not only enriching for your soul, it opens you up to new possibilities for your main creative work.
 
©2005 Suzanne Falter-Barns LLC.   For information on how to find the time, energy, and money to live your purpose in life, check out Suzanne's free ezine, The Joy Letter. Sign up at http://www.howmuchjoy.com/joyletter.html and receive our valuable report, 35 Guaranteed Time Savers.
 

Subscribe to Momscape blog via email
Subscribe via email


Subscribe to our blog


Follow us on Twitter


Find us on Facebook









Copyright Momscape.com All Rights Reserved

Coupons, Coupon Codes, and Promotion from our favorite online stores:
By Store: Amazon.com | American Express | Artful Home| Audible.com | Avon |Babies R Us | Baby Center | Baby Universe | Beauty.com | Best Buy | Blue Nile | Brooks Brothers | Buy.com | Children's Place | Chadwicks | Circuit City | Cooking.com | Dell Coupons | Dick Blick | DirecTV Promotions | Disney Shopping | Ebags.com | Endless Shoes | Entertainment Books  | Folica.com | Franklin Covey | Gap | Gile Toys | Educational Toys  | Hotels.com | Joann Fabrics | KB Toys | Kohls | Koo Koo Bear Kids | Leaps and Bounds | Lens.com | Lids.com | Lillian Vernon | MotherNature.com | Netflix | Office Depot | Old Navy | One Step Ahead | Oriental Trading | Overstock | PetCo | PetsMart | Photoworks | Priceline Coupons | Red Envelope | Restaurant.com | Sears.com | Sharper Image | Shoebuy | ShopNBC
| SkinStore.com | Sierra Trading Post  | Smartbargains  | Snapfish | SpaFinder.com | SpaLook.com | Staples | Target | Travelocity | Victoria's Secret | Vitamin Shoppe | Wal-Mart | Warm Biscuit Bedding | Weight Watchers | Westin Hotels | Wine.com | shoes | 1-800-Flowers | 1-800-Contacts| More >
View All Coupons by Category >