Writers' Community!
Home News Business Science & Technology Life Style
Front Page Page Two Columnists Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 5,612 Authors
48,603 Quality Articles
& 6,459 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Joel Hendon (4,870)
Sandra E. Graham (2,260)
Robert Melaccio, Sr. (6,428)
Terry Mitchell (2,881)
Mike Fak (6,526)
Walter Rhett (2,655)
David Pekrul (802)
Barbara Clark (479)
Teresa Ortiz (4,920)
Jane Bullard (2,004)
Tex Norman (4,421)
Janice Tracy (148)
David Tanguay (7,680)
Mogama (12,506)

View All Featured Authors
Most Recent
The Dream "Riding on the crest of a wave"

Perception

Living a Creative & Fulfilling Life

The Gift

Memory Tips You Can Use Today

Journaling - A Self-Care Practice

Realistic Lateral Thinking Problems

Crazy Ideas Can Be Valuable

Career-Creative Harmony: Four Powerful Metaphors

A Deep Thinking Technique To Try

Home » Categories » Personal » Creativity » Career-Creative Harmony: Four Powerful Metaphors » Printer Friendly

Career-Creative Harmony: Four Powerful Metaphors

Rated 3.5 out of 5
Rated 5.0 by 1 Reader ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by Gopal Ramasammy-Cook
Submitted Saturday, August 16, 2008
Gopal Ramasammy-Cook (10)
ZestWare
Log in to become a member of Gopal Ramasammy-Cook's Fan Club!


I'm sure you agree with me that career and creativity are two of the central defining aspects of our lives as vibrant, happy, prosperous human beings. When they exist in harmony, and in healthy a relationship to each other, they contribute to our sense of significance and the energized and inspired state we refer to as “zest for life". One of the things you're really going to love about this article is that it outlines four powerful metaphors that you can use to clarify your perspective on your career and creativity, and forge a harmonious relationship between these two central life-facets for a happy, meaningful and prosperous life.

But before we get to those powerful metaphors, a bit of background and context. Most of us spend a huge chunk of our precious life-hours in activities directly or indirectly related to work. Yet few people plan, visualize, or craft their careers or career transitions with as much care, awareness, and dedication as buying a car, painting the house, or going on holiday.

Humans are natural creators. We all aspire to nurture our great ideas from their infancy, through the shaky days of toddler-hood and puberty, and to finally to see them living as independent and appreciated creations. Whatever else we are creating, whether in the artistic, scientific, technical, or other domains, we are also as a side-effect creating meaning within our own lives and in the world. This in turn adds to our sense of significance and our zest for life.

Our careers are themselves powerful sources of creative opportunity, and forces for creation. But most aspiring creators soon come up against internal and external obstacles which seriously limit the chances of their creations surviving or flourishing as significant entities in the world.

Why use metaphors? Metaphor is a powerful creative mind-tool. Perhaps it is the most powerful, as it forms the basis of many of our other creative tools such as picture, story, symbol, and creative thinking. A metaphor is simply a statement or reference relating one thing or situation to another seemingly unrelated thing or situation.

Metaphors form such a natural part of our language and thinking that we often do not notice them. But the metaphors we use have a profound effect on how we view ourselves, our lives, our careers, and our organizations. They also influence the outcomes of our ventures. For example, a CEO who sees herself as the general of an army is likely to have a very different leadership style to one who sees herself as the conductor of an orchestra. She is also likely to build a very different kind of organization with very different results.Metaphors are useful for making information more palatable to our minds by allowing us to organize and structure separate bits of information into meaningful, coherent, and satisfying frameworks. The four metaphors I present in this article look at four possible relationship between career and creativity and conform to an overarching metaphorical theme of creating a piece of art such as a painting, a story, a sculpture, or a song.

THE FOUR METAPHORS

1. Career as Paintbrush:
The first metaphor refers to using the elements and resources of your career in a creative way to bring about value for your clients, employers, the target market, and other stakeholders. Here the elements and resources of your career are used as artistic tools and resources, and would correspond metaphorically to the painter's paints and brushes, the singers voice, the musician's instrument, or the writer's pen.

2. Career as Painting:
The second metaphor relates to applying your creativity to design, craft, and create your ideal career. Here your career itself becomes the art-form, similar to a painting or sculpture. It is the object or artifact to be created. One benefit of seeing your career as a work of art, is that a creative process can be used in its crafting.

3. Career as Artist's Patron:
The third situation is where your career serves as a patron of your artistic or creative endeavor. Here, the person's creative pursuits might not be directly related to her career, as in the case of an accountant who is also a weekend sculptor, or an engineer who writes poetry. So what exactly is the relationship of the patron (career) to the creative endeavor? I believe that in its most healthy and harmonious form it is a reciprocal relationship where the career, as patron, supports the creative endeavor financially and materially, and the creative process and products energize and inspire the career, giving it an added significance and meaning.

4. Career as Artist's Model:
The fourth and final metaphor refers to using artistic modes such as storytelling, collage, poetry, and art-journaling to reflect on and enhance your understanding, inspiration and engagement with your career. Here your career serves as the subject of your art, in the same way as a painter's model or landscape might serve as the subject for a painting, and a lyricist's personal experiences might serve as the subject matter for writing a song. This kind of creative engagement with career as artistic subject is a valuable reflective tool for enriching your inner map of your career and the broader career landscape. This, in turn, can help you stay on-track for all the other career-creative goals embodied in the three previous metaphors.

SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
In summary, the four metaphors are: career as paintbrush, career as painting, career as artist's patron, and career as artist's model. By internalizing these four metaphors for career-creative harmony, you can visualize and craft your career and creative endeavors in a powerful and complementary way to ensure yourself a life of career-creative harmony and zest.

Gopal Ramasammy-Cook is a Career-Creativity Coach at ZestWare. His ideas and insights about Career-Creative Harmony can be found at http://www.zestware.com, where you can also download his gift to you of his e-book, Covered In Sun.

 






Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of Gopal Ramasammy-Cook's Fan Club!

Comments on this article:


» left by Sandra E. Graham (2,260)
Sandra E. Graham
(108 days 19 hours ago.)

Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
Wonderful article, Gopal. I had never thought of career and creativity in just that text before; but it sounds like it would work. Well-written and some great ideas to think about.
 
Thanks for sharing.
 
Sandra

Respond to this comment
» left by Gopal Ramasammy-Cook (10) (108 days 16 hours ago.)
Thank you Sandra for your kind and constructive comment. It is much appreciated.

Regards and all the best
Gopal 
Respond to this comment

Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

 

This Article has been viewed 31 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on Saturday, August 16, 2008
View other articles written by Gopal Ramasammy-Cook (10)


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
New Perspectives: Increase Your Creativity and Imagination Using the Art of Reframing

Increase Creative Self-Belief: Overcoming The Danger Of Negative "Snap-Back"

Perception

How to be More Creative and Enhance Your Creativity

I Want to be Creative but Don't Know How

Creative Sensuality - How Regularly Exercising Your Senses Can Help You Increase Your Creativity

Out Of The Box - A Mental Exercise

Creative Perfectionism Is A Killer Disease: Here's The Miracle Cure

Creative Day Jobs: How to Support Yourself While Pursuing Your Creativity

Real Genius - IQ or Creativity?

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Writers' Contests  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2008 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company