087 – No Excuses: Creating Through Adversity

15/03/2025 22 min
087 – No Excuses: Creating Through Adversity

Listen "087 – No Excuses: Creating Through Adversity"

Episode Synopsis

Are you finding yourself paralyzed by "world conditions," unable to create because things just feel too chaotic? Have you caught yourself crafting eloquent social media posts about why creativity is impossible right now, while ironically demonstrating your creative abilities in the process? Do you believe that true artistic expression can only flourish under ideal circumstances, or have you been using external factors as a shield against the vulnerability of creating?

In this unfiltered episode of Creativity Excitement Emotion, David delivers a passionate wake-up call that might just be the tough love you need to hear. Drawing from his own experience of writing multiple books while homeless, facing bankruptcy, and surviving on $50 of groceries for six weeks, he challenges the intellectualized excuses that keep artists stuck in patterns of inaction.

Whether you're genuinely struggling with legitimate hardship or simply hiding behind societal problems to avoid creative risks, this episode offers both the compassion and confrontation needed to move beyond excuses and back into meaningful creative work.

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Highlights:
00:17 – Someone opened Pandora’s Box
01:15 – A channel for free expression
02:48 – A smack upside the head
03:32 – Conditions that can make it challenging to create
04:15 – A time for everything under the sun
05:26 – If you have time enough to post to Facebook…
07:30 – Deconstructing a Facebook comment
14:09 – Famous artists who succeeded in the face of adversity
15:07 – Conditions David faced as he was writing four books
18:49 – The cost of inaction
Summary:
In this passionate and challenging episode, David delivers a powerful wake-up call to artists who blame external circumstances for their creative paralysis.

With raw honesty and personal vulnerability, he confronts the excuses that prevent action while sharing his own journey of creating multiple books during a period of homelessness, financial devastation, and personal loss.
Key Themes & Takeaways

The fundamental difference between legitimate hardship and intellectualized excuses
How external conditions are rarely the true barrier to creativity
The self-defeating cycle of blaming societal problems for personal inaction
The historical precedent of great artists who thrived during genuinely difficult times

The Permission Paradox
David begins by acknowledging legitimate reasons for creative pauses while challenging the tendency to intellectualize inaction:

The importance of recognizing genuine hardship (grief, illness, burnout) versus manufactured obstacles
The irony of those who claim they "can't create due to world conditions" while crafting eloquent social media posts
The permission to rest when truly needed versus the self-deception of false limitations
The difference between temporary creative blocks and complete creative abandonment

"If you have time enough to post about this on Facebook, that's not the condition you're in, is it? That's not the circumstance you're facing, is it? It's not like Uncle Sam or the government has come knocking at your door and is escorting you to the nearest FEMA camp to be imprisoned there for all lifetime."
Dismantling Popular Excuses
With pointed precision, David deconstructs common justifications for creative inaction:

The "progressive narrative" and "class divide" arguments that serve as intellectual diversions
Environmental concerns that, while valid for discussion, have little bearing on individual creative capacity
Funding challenges that can be addressed through proactive measures rather than passive complaint
The "Trump squeeze" and "planetary crisis" justifications that lack specificity and actionable relevance

"Why aren't you directing your thoughts in the direction of creating funding instead of talking about where the funding is supposed to come from? Why aren't you demanding some accountability from your government? They're supposed to be your employees. They're supposed to represent you."
Historical Perspective on Creative Adversity
David places current challenges in the broader context of art history:

References to Renaissance masters who created masterpieces during genuinely difficult historical periods
The enduring principle that "when the going gets tough, the tough get going"
The contrast between perceived modern hardships and the genuine adversities faced by historical creators
How art has often flourished precisely during periods of societal challenge and disruption

"Michelangelo, Rembrandt, Botticelli, just three artists, just a few examples of people who did great work when quote unquote ‘times were tough.’ And guess what? They probably were going through real tough times, not the kind of stuff we're talking about."
Personal Vulnerability
In perhaps the most powerful section, David shares his own experience of creating through genuine hardship:

Writing multiple books while homeless for two years
Facing a lawsuit and near-bankruptcy
Surviving on minimal food ($50 of groceries for six weeks)
Selling beloved musical instruments
Working through grief after losing his grandfather

"These are the conditions under which I wrote those books. Get it through your skull. You can create under conditions that are less than favorable."
Action Steps for Artists
For creators feeling stuck, David offers direct guidance:

Recognize the difference between legitimate obstacles and intellectualized excuses
Take immediate action – "the next second, not the next minute"
Invest in resources that can help advance your career, even if just $4.99 for a book
Understand that improving your situation improves the world's situation
Channel societal concerns into creative expression rather than creative paralysis
Focus on what you can control rather than external circumstances

The Leadership of Responsibility
David closes with a powerful statement of leadership accountability:

Taking personal responsibility for his listeners' inaction
Challenging artists to prove him wrong through immediate creativity
Expressing disappointment at the gap between audience size and visible action
Reframing creative work as a contribution to solving larger problems

"I take responsibility for the action you haven't taken, whether it's for the ‘Trump squeeze’ or for some other weird reason. Sorry, did I say reason? I meant to say excuses. These are excuses for not acting."
Additional Context
This episode arrives during a period when many creative professionals cite "uncertain times" or "world conditions" as reasons for diminished output. Research from the Creative Industries Federation indicates that while 73% of artists report feeling affected by global events, those who maintain consistent creative practice during challenging periods report 42% higher wellbeing scores and 38% greater career resilience.

The timing is particularly relevant as social media platforms have become spaces where intellectual discourse often substitutes for creative action. Studies show that creative professionals who spend more than two hours daily on social media platforms report 27% lower creative output than those who limit consumption to under 30 minutes.

Through his direct challenge and personal disclosure, David offers a compelling argument for creativity as an act of resilience rather than a luxury dependent on perfect conditions.

This episode serves as both a compassionate acknowledgment of genuine hardship and a firm rejection of intellectualized excuses that prevent artists from fulfilling their creative potential.

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