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Jenny Williams

Jenny Williams

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Dead or dormant? (And a song)

May. 24, 2025

Do you ever feel like your creativity died when your adult responsibilities took over?

This is a topic that comes up occasionally among my friends who are raising young children. It sometimes feels like there’s just no time, or energy, to explore creative habits, old or new.

While it’s true that seasons ebb and flow with regard to creativity, it’s important to mentally put dry seasons in their place, lest we become discouraged:

Our creativity has not died, it has either taken other forms, or is simply lying dormant (which, just as in nature, is not a bad thing).

As long as we don’t think of ourselves as having failed, our creative pursuits will always be there waiting for us when we are ready to come back to them.

Let’s say you are a writer, and you haven’t written anything beyond texts and emails since before you had a full time job, or before you had kids.

Your creativity has not died, it’s simply taken other forms: managing people in your job, solving problems creatively, organizing your week so that you aren’t coming up with dinner on the fly every night, being the peacemaker between a sibling squabble, etc.

You have to remember that those are related to your writing in some way, because they are all creative acts.

Do you want to know what I really think?

I think nurturing creativity is such a wonderfully good thing to contribute to the world — a gift that strengthens and makes better ourselves and our communities — that there is no end to the little voices seeking to discourage us.

We have to fight those voices.

That’s what I think.

I never meant for this post to get dramatic, but I’m begging you: if you haven’t touched your electric guitar or a paint brush or a crochet needle in years, please don’t think of yourself as having failed creatively.

That’s exactly what the enemy wants you to think.

That’s exactly the kind of thinking that will keep you from ever picking up your creative habit again.

Maybe you are in a season where survival is simply all you can manage. It’s never a time to beat yourself up for not doing x, y, z, creative thing, but this time is especially not the time for it.

If that’s where you are at right now: hang in there, and remember that you are in a creative season of receiving, not outputting.

Meaning, your creativity looks more like being gentle and patient with your thoughts toward yourself, listening to beautiful music, or reading a good book at the pace of a paragraph a week.

Those things may in fact take more courage than taking on a big creative project when you have ample time and energy.

If that’s not where you are at, and you are ready to dip your toes back into the thing you enjoy (drawing, playing music, gardening, cooking, organizing closets, etc.), here are a three simple ideas to rekindle your old love without feeling overwhelmed:

  1. Revisit some of your old work (read an old poem, read your journal, look at the black and white photos you took in high school). Look at it to enjoy it, not critique it.
  2. Open up a notebook and write down something funny your kid said today, or something that made you laugh.
  3. Admire someone else’s work — whether it’s a famous artist, a friend’s substack, or your first-grader’s water colors (encouraging other’s creativity is a wonderful, and often underestimated, way of participating in the creative act).

Speaking of creative acts lying dormant …

My creative outlet in college was writing and performing songs at open mic nights and other small venues.

Up until recently, I hadn’t written a song in 15 years. I wondered if that part of me had died (or, er, forever dormant), or if it had simply taken other forms in my art and book writing and I would never see it again.

But then, about a year ago, out of seemingly no where, a song came. The words, then the melody, then the tears. It was a gift.

I’d love to play that song for you some time, but not yet.

For now, here’s a song from my past life about delighting in the little surprises a day can bring. I hope you enjoy it!

Tell me: what creative acts are you enjoying now? What did you used to love to do that has taken other forms or is simply lying dormant? I’d love to hear!

Category: Creativity Tags: creative habits, creativity, music, original song, when you don't have time to create

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Comments

  1. Stacey Carpenter says

    May 25, 2025 at 12:17 am

    I love this!!! What a lovely way to think about it. Art and dollhouse miniatures are the ones I have set aside, but thankfully photography and gardening have been creative outlets that include my kids more and can be done in smaller snippets of time.

    Reply
    • Jenny Williams says

      May 25, 2025 at 12:28 am

      How wonderful that you’ve been able to pivot and adapt!

      Reply
  2. Thea says

    May 26, 2025 at 12:43 pm

    This is so lovely–and so TRUE. I’m in a season now where my kids are old enough for me to develop those creative habits again (you and I seem to have very similar interests–writing songs, making art, writing books!), and I’m so grateful for the ways the Lord nurtured those seeds during the dormant years. And one of the best parts of this season is the way my daughters get to be involved in the creative things I’m doing, even as they’re developing their own skills and interests! It’s such a sweet time, and one I couldn’t have imagined when I had four very small daughters and only a few spare moments during naptime to create.

    So: you’re onto something here! Sometimes we lay our gifts down and while we’re busy elsewhere, the Lord causes them to grow 🙂

    Reply
  3. Ashley says

    May 26, 2025 at 9:43 pm

    I really appreciate what you said here about our creativity not dying, only taking other forms during certain seasons. My creativity has dominantly gone to homeschooling for the last 18 years, with a little writing and lots of photography mixed in. But now that season is over, and I find myself with open space and unsure what should fill it. I’m finding it’s helpful right now to just “be” and give time for creative pursuit to push its way to the surface, rather than trying to hurry and force it. Your words here made me feel encouraged in this gentle approach I’m taking with myself. 🙂

    Reply

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Welcome!

I’m so glad you’re here. I’m Jenny Williams, artist, author, and creator of Carrot Top Paper Shop: an online gift shop for book lovers and kindred spirits. I am passionate about nurturing creativity and approaching every area of life with a heroine mindset. Make yourself comfortable, won’t you? And I’ll pour you a glass of “raspberry cordial” …

My episode on @megsreadingroom came out today and My episode on @megsreadingroom came out today and in honor of the occasion, I’d love to give away a copy of Eat Like a Heroine to one of you!

To enter, simply leave a comment below sharing a literary heroine who has impacted you, or tag a friend you think would like Eat Like a Heroine. (The more comments, the more entries!)

Be sure to check out Meg’s podcast for delightful bookish interviews that will help you discover your next heartwarming read! 

I loved talking to Meg about what it means to Eat Like a Heroine, the impact of American Girl on the Millennial psyche, and a little about the power of the Heroine Journey … and my next book. Thanks again, @megsreadingroom! 💗(photo credit: @megsreadingroom)
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The best way to stay in touch/receive the latest shop news is to join my email list (also called The Kindred Spirit Club!). Use the link in my bio to sign up, and you’ll get all the details for my upcoming collection, as well as discount codes and sale alerts. 🥳
“Do you ever feel like your creativity died when “Do you ever feel like your creativity died when your adult responsibilities took over?

This is a topic that comes up occasionally among my friends who are raising young children. 

It sometimes feels like there’s just no time, or energy, to explore creative habits, old or new.

While it’s true that seasons ebb and flow with regard to creativity, it’s important to mentally put dry seasons in their place:

your creativity has not died. It has either taken other forms, or is simply lying dormant (which, just as in nature, is not a bad thing).”

Read the full post on my blog, and tell me what creative season you are in, in the comments. Wherever you are, I am cheering you on! (Link in bio.)
🎶 This is no ordinary day. The birds are chirpi 🎶 This is no ordinary day. The birds are chirping in their usual way. 🎶 

After I shared my last post about the chorus of birds I’ve been tuning into, and how the habit tends to realign my perspective to reality …

I thought it would be fun to record a song for you. 🎹 (find the link in my bio.)

✏️I wrote this song, called Kaleidoscope View, 17 years ago, in college, and played it at many-an-open mic night/Starbucks, but since then, I just play my songs at home.

🐦’Birds’ are a theme that popped up a lot in my songwriting in my early twenties, and it’s been cropping up again lately in my current projects.

Are you, too, comforted by the sound of the birds’ songs? I think they are very wise.

And as I said in my last blog, I love pondering what the “lyrics” may really be.

This song is an extension of that wondering … I hope you enjoy it!
I love the way @anniebjones05 talks about how stay I love the way @anniebjones05 talks about how staying put doesn’t have to mean settling, lack of courage, or any other negative connotation.

Staying can also mean contentment, loyalty, making adventure out of little things ... groundedness.

For a long time I hadn’t really thought of myself as a “person who stays” geographically, which is ironic coming from someone who lives a few miles from where she grew up.

After college I did move away to begin my own grand adventure: to Washington, D.C. to pursue a career in politics (I thought perhaps in speech writing), and after five years, moved back to my home state of Oklahoma.

As time goes on, that five year window becomes a smaller and smaller percentage of my life. 

And I find myself relating to much of Annie’s story (which may be quiet, but is certainly an adventure!).

I am thoroughly enjoying Annie’s debut book, Ordinary Time, and I’m not surprised at all that she could make me see something right in front of my face with fresh eyes and a new perspective. 

I have always loved the way Annie sees the world, and her book is an adventurous deep dive into all the unusual ways in which we can discover surprises hiding in our own versions of “commonplace”.

Have you read Ordinary Time yet? 

(On my blog this week, I share a couple of favorite fiction books that celebrate the quiet adventure that can come from staying put with purpose. Share any of your favorites below!)
“If I told a child fearsome tales about ferociou “If I told a child fearsome tales about ferocious lions, the jaws of deep sea creatures, and snakes that lie in wait to strangle their prey … but I left out the chorus of birds … I wouldn’t necessarily be lying about nature, but it certainly wouldn’t give her an accurate picture of it, would it?”

On my blog today I’m sharing ten fiction books that sing in harmony with the chorus of birds. 

The reality that informs their song is the same one hidden in these books. And reading them is an invitation to become more rooted in that same truth ...

What’s a fiction book you love that makes you feel more grounded?

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