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Not Having Your Own Back Has Cost You Years of Progress
Manage episode 471187304 series 2394520
When things don’t go your way in your art practice, what do you do? Like many artists, you might beat yourself up with lots of self-criticism and judgment. You’d be better off creating the habit of having your own back instead. That way, you’ll actually speed up your progress and not look back a year from now with regret that you’re still stuck in the same place.
In this episode of The Savvy Painter Podcast, I’ll reveal exactly what having your own back looks like, why it’s a crucial skill you must learn, and how not doing so can hold you back for years. I’ll also discuss the impact of creating this habit on you as an artist and how compassionate support (from yourself and/or others) helps evolve your art practice.
2:53 – Why self-criticism doesn’t make you a better artist
8:04 - How getting rejected isn’t really about your work
10:29 – What having your own back means and why it’s a crucial skill to develop
14:52 – How creating the habit of having your own back impacts your art practice
17:02 – Explicit and implicit messages you’ve received that encourage self-criticism
20:16 – Why compassion and empathy in the face of rejection help you evolve
24:46 – Why feeling ready to show your work isn’t likely or necessary
Mentioned in Not Having Your Own Back Has Cost You Years of Progress
Chapters
1. Not Having Your Own Back Has Cost You Years of Progress (00:00:00)
2. Why self-criticism doesn’t make you a better artist (00:02:53)
3. How getting rejected isn’t really about your work (00:08:04)
4. What having your own back means and why it’s a crucial skill to develop (00:10:29)
5. How creating the habit of having your own back impacts your art practice (00:14:52)
6. Explicit and implicit messages you’ve received that encourage self-criticism (00:17:02)
7. Why compassion and empathy in the face of rejection help you evolve (00:20:16)
8. Why feeling ready to show your work isn’t likely or necessary (00:24:46)
351 episodes
Manage episode 471187304 series 2394520
When things don’t go your way in your art practice, what do you do? Like many artists, you might beat yourself up with lots of self-criticism and judgment. You’d be better off creating the habit of having your own back instead. That way, you’ll actually speed up your progress and not look back a year from now with regret that you’re still stuck in the same place.
In this episode of The Savvy Painter Podcast, I’ll reveal exactly what having your own back looks like, why it’s a crucial skill you must learn, and how not doing so can hold you back for years. I’ll also discuss the impact of creating this habit on you as an artist and how compassionate support (from yourself and/or others) helps evolve your art practice.
2:53 – Why self-criticism doesn’t make you a better artist
8:04 - How getting rejected isn’t really about your work
10:29 – What having your own back means and why it’s a crucial skill to develop
14:52 – How creating the habit of having your own back impacts your art practice
17:02 – Explicit and implicit messages you’ve received that encourage self-criticism
20:16 – Why compassion and empathy in the face of rejection help you evolve
24:46 – Why feeling ready to show your work isn’t likely or necessary
Mentioned in Not Having Your Own Back Has Cost You Years of Progress
Chapters
1. Not Having Your Own Back Has Cost You Years of Progress (00:00:00)
2. Why self-criticism doesn’t make you a better artist (00:02:53)
3. How getting rejected isn’t really about your work (00:08:04)
4. What having your own back means and why it’s a crucial skill to develop (00:10:29)
5. How creating the habit of having your own back impacts your art practice (00:14:52)
6. Explicit and implicit messages you’ve received that encourage self-criticism (00:17:02)
7. Why compassion and empathy in the face of rejection help you evolve (00:20:16)
8. Why feeling ready to show your work isn’t likely or necessary (00:24:46)
351 episodes
All episodes
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