Web Toolbar by Wibiya
Site Tools

Want to Stay Current?

Then sign up to receive Email Updates for the site! Easy, painless, free -- and no spam! Click here to be in the know!


Site User Guide

Believe it or not, there is a page on How to Use This Site. If you haven't explored (and even if you have), you might want to check it out, so you don't miss any of the features.


Blog Filter

Click a link below to only see blog entries for that category.


Recent Posts

Click a link to read that post.


Search the Site

Use this widget to search the site, and to set your search preferences.


RSS Feed

Here is the feed for the blog. If you are interested in the feeds for the comments as well, drop me an email and I'll add them.


Universal Bookmarker

Click to Bookmark!

Social Media Links

Yes, Bruce is on Facebook and Twitter! As if this site isn't enough, now you can be annoyed by him follow him in all your favorite online communities. Click and go!

Login
« It's Game Day Baybee!! | Main | Presidential Assassinations of U.S. Citizens »
Wednesday
Mar172010

A Book for Artists and Humans of All Kinds

Just finished The War of Art by Steven Pressfield. It's a book about the struggle to create art, to live to our higher calling, and to be and become what we are intended to be. And it has entered a very select category for me: Books That Changed My Life.

If you think that's hyperbole, think again. Pressfield nails three concepts that any artist -- indeed, any human -- struggles with daily:

  • Resistance -- that force that tries to prevent you from achieving what you are supposed to achieve.
  • Professional versus Amateur -- how to approach your calling with the attitude of the Professional, not the Amateur -- including the realization that Resistance is real and must be both respected and overcome, every day.
  • Muses and Angels -- the idea that when you commit, even in the face of Resistance, there are forces outside of you that come to your aid and align themselves with you.

I'll be honest -- I wasn't expecting that third section. Every since I read The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron, I have wondered about her assertion that the Universe helps you when you are moving down the right path, and that only by starting down that path will we find that out. Seemed too "new agey" for me. But even while I struggled with the concept, I had to acknowledge that there were times when my life felt "in the flow" and times when it didn't. And, there were times when committing to write or create seemed to unleash forces within me, or even outside of me, that I didn't know I had.

Pressfield's discussion of Resistance is worth the cost of the book, all by itself. By putting a name and a personality on the force that seems to oppose our work, he gives us a way to identify, discuss, and defeat that force. It has already helped me to say "this is Resistance at work" in various areas of my life, and to begin using Pressfield's strategies to fight back.

And lest any of you think this is only for artists, let me point out that Pressfield takes pains to note that Resistance and Being a Pro apply to any activity in our lives that can be classified as either Calling or Higher Purpose. He talks about writing, music-making, starting a business, helping others -- almost any human activity that comes from Self and not Ego.

And yes, at the end of the book he ties it all together with a discussion of Ego versus Self. It provides a surprising ending to a surprising book. Whether or not you accept his metaphysical approach to Angels and Muses, the distinction he makes between Ego (the seat of Resistance) and Self is useful and insightful.

This is an important book for anyone looking to better understand the forces in their lives and the path to fulfilling their life's purpose and calling. Get it, read it, apply it. It may become part of your collection of Books That Changed My Life.

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>