How to keep going: Navigating the ebb and flow of creativity and motivation

Stuck in a rut? We assess the many reasons you can’t get motivated, and offer some techniques to get back on track.

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Wise Guides is an advice series for creatives navigating the first years of their careers. In this piece, Danielle Pender looks at all the factors standing in the way of you getting going – from creative block, to health, money, routine and expectations – and shares tips to nudge you off the starting blocks.

Motivation is a tricky and nebulous thing – much like inspiration. It means different things to different people; it can strike at odd times and drain away just when you need it most. At its core, motivation is the driving force that compels you to follow the kernel of an idea, to keep going, and create whatever it is that captures your interest. If your creative outlet is the thing that makes you money, gives you purpose, or simply makes you feel a little better about being alive, it can be worrying and pretty depressing when your motivation vanishes without leaving an out of office when it’ll be back.

But all is not lost!

A loss of motivation is often linked to some kind of block – be it money, self-belief, a messy routine, or a lack of purpose. Some of these blocks overlap, while others stand alone. And while it may be impossible to pinpoint your exact issue on a personal level in an article like this, there are practical steps you can take and questions you can ask yourself to help unearth what motivation means for you and how you can reignite the spark that has perhaps been snuffed out. Below, we’ve gathered some of the most common challenges and potential solutions to help you get back on track.

Creative block

Let’s start with a good old-fashioned creative block. Do your ideas suddenly seem basic, and you don’t have the energy to follow them through or develop them to their full potential?

In general, a creative block or loss of motivation for a project or career can sometimes stem from losing your love for what you're doing. Maybe the client has become an intolerable pain in the arse, and your motivation for the work has expired, or perhaps you've fallen out of love with the work itself. You may have moved on artistically, mentally, or emotionally, leaving your passion behind.

Solution: Put things in perspective. Ask yourself if this job or annoying client will free you up to create your own work elsewhere. If so, can you push through to the other side and enjoy the fruits of your labour? Consider whether this is an opportunity to evaluate why you took on the client in the first place. Could you examine what went wrong, is it something you can take ownership of, or could you determine how and why it doesn’t align with what you want to be doing? This reflection might help you set better boundaries next time round.

Or is it a time to experiment with a new style, format, or medium? Have you lost your motivation because you’re bored and feeling stuck in a creative rut? Pushing yourself in a new direction could spark deeper joy and lead to fresh ideas, boosting your motivation. If you've lost your love for what you do, spend time interrogating what exactly is crushing your passion and exploring ways to address it.

Artist and designer Sarah Boris found her creativity and motivation come rushing back when she quit what was on paper a dream job that had become stifling. She returned to running her own studio and found inspiration in trying new things. “I took the job as it felt like a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, but it was so consuming that I would spend most of my days there late into the night and definitely desk-bound. I felt I was losing myself. When I left, I was confronted with new subject matters, materials, and forms of making, and it was like a newfound waterfall of creativity.”

Side projects

As budgets have shrunk over the last few years, it feels like many creatives took on full-time or in-house jobs, which perhaps offered financial security but didn’t allow for much creative freedom, and I get a sense that the side project is making a comeback. The side project is more of a hobby and shouldn’t be confused with the draining side hustle, which is more about making as much money from your extracurriculars as possible. It’s potentially niche, self-indulgent, unscalable – something you can’t optimise but absolutely love. It should be fun, involving people you like working with, bringing maximum joy and minimal pressure into your life. Here, you can play, experiment, and rediscover your motivation for your creative self outside the confines of what is going on in the rest of your life.

Solution: Tala Safié is the graphics and multimedia editor at The New York Times who works to tight deadlines within a relatively rigid set of design rules that need to exist for the newspaper to function. Outside of her day job, she cultivates her creativity and motivation by making time for personal projects that allow her to connect to her homeland of Beirut and work with people she finds inspiring. As she explains: “In my personal practice, I try to collaborate with friends, particularly those from Beirut, to stay connected with home – and it’s a great excuse to work on bilingual projects. I also try to take on print projects to balance the digital focus of my daily job – it's my way of scratching the print itch.” These projects have included Salmandal – a subversive Lebanese comic; Cold Cuts – a bi-annual photo journal exploring queer culture in the middle east; and she guest-edited an issue of The Smudge.

You could also take a cue from Miranda July, who, while struggling to cast a character for her film The Future, embarked on a project that became her book It Chooses You. By stepping away from her film project and interviewing random people, she reinvigorated her love for the film and found the perfect actor for the role.

So, the next time you're stuck, look elsewhere for a little light creative procrastination – you never know where it might lead you. (See also this feature on how ‘unfocus’ time can sometimes be helpful in the creative process.)

Ebb & flow

You can't be ON all of the time. There will be times when you’re better suited to deep work – like idea generation, strategy, or big-vision tasks – and other times when you're better at being an email butler or tidying your desktop/workspace. It's impossible to be productive and highly motivated 24/7, and if you're struggling with motivation, maybe you're working against your natural rhythms. Perhaps you work best later in the day, but you’re putting pressure on yourself to perform first thing and then feeling despondent when you can’t.

Solution: Is this about getting a routine in order? When do you work best? By “best,” I mean when you find yourself in a flow state or when you feel most motivated. Is it in the morning, afternoon, or evening? Identify the times when you feel most creative and arrange your tasks accordingly. If you’re most alive in the morning, block out that time for generating ideas, save emails for after lunch, and schedule meetings at the end of the day. While you may not have complete control over your schedule in a large company, can you request adjustments to your meeting times or take some ownership of your diary?

Also, crucially, you need to take breaks, as illustrator and animator Angela Kirkwood explains. “I have worked through the night, cancelled plans and tried to cram as much work as I can in, thinking that I’m getting ahead only to suddenly collapse in a heap and find that I’ve lost all motivation. When you get to that point, it takes a longer time to recover. As they say, slow and steady wins the race!”

How are you?

What do you need to feel good? More sleep? Less booze? More support? Less caffeine after 2pm to avoid that crushing headache and anxiety? If your motivation is waning, it could be because you're not taking care of yourself.

Dopamine is the clever hormone that controls our motivation. However, our dopamine is constantly under attack in our modern world, and our motivation is often depleted. The worst offenders are your phone/social media, alcohol, drugs, stress, lack of sleep, poor diet – too much saturated fat and ultra-processed food. These give your brain a huge spike in dopamine, but as it tries to stabilise, it dips below your natural levels, leaving you feeling worse – which is why you feel so terrible after a deep social scroll or late-night bender.

Fortunately, there are simple habits you can incorporate into your day to help stabilise your dopamine levels. These might include regular exercise, healthy eating, mindfulness practices, or simply limiting your exposure to things that cause dopamine spikes. For Angela Kirkwood, a solid and straightforward routine is best; “Firstly, and this might sound too simple, but I find that just making sure I have had enough sleep, drank enough water, had breakfast, and getting out for a walk makes the biggest difference to my energy and motivation levels.”

This waning motivation might also be a sign that your mental health needs prioritising. Seek out friends and collaborators to talk about what you’re going through, or if you need it, see your GP or try to find a therapist who can offer more in-depth and specialised advice. There are resources at places such as Better Help and Mind for finding a range of therapies – and advice on getting free therapy if needed.

Cash money

Money can be a great motivator or a significant demotivator, depending on the flow of funds. If you feel like you're working all the time but are always skint, a sense of "what's the point?" can creep in. On the flip side, money can keep you in a job for security, even if it saps your creativity and motivation.

Solution: If you’re working constantly but not seeing financial rewards, consider seeking constructive feedback on diversifying your offerings or pushing your style/practice further. Do you need to get the word out there more effectively? Perhaps it’s time to raise your product prices or day rates. Additionally, assess whether you’re working smart. Could you audit how you spend your time and outsource unnecessary tasks like accounting, marketing, or PR? Focus on what brings in the most money and do more of that while gradually building financial reserves.

Expectations

Sometimes, motivation takes a hit when you've been working on something that doesn't resonate with you as you’d hoped. There could be numerous reasons why something isn't landing that you can't control, but one thing you can control is your level of expectation.

Did you think your work would go viral, but it didn’t? Were you expecting an award or to be further along in your career by now? Are you measuring your success on the back of someone else’s or a wider societal set of rules? These unmet expectations can fester and impact your motivation.

Solution: Check in on where your ideas or markers of success have come from. Is it an accurate representation of what is important to you, or have you absorbed it from elsewhere? A helpful quote to remember is, “Happiness = reality - expectations.” Normally we feel disappointed when our expectations aren’t met, so perhaps audit how aligned yours are for yourself and your work because while motivation isn’t the same as happiness, they are closely linked. When you’re happier at work, your motivation increases, driving you to pursue your ideas further.

Angela Kirkwood makes a great point about the importance of creating work that’s close to home: “I think making work that you feel personally connected to, rather than trying to guess what you think others might like or what is popular at the time, is important for keeping motivation.”

Outside influences

In today’s world, we’re bombarded by news updates of atrocities happening around the globe and a climate crisis no one seems to have a handle on. It can be crippling if our loved ones are involved or, let’s be honest if you have any kind of moral conscience. You might feel guilt or anxiety over the privilege of being able to check out. This constant feed of crises can take a toll on your mental health, creativity, and motivation. It can become difficult to focus on a project when it feels inconsequential against the backdrop of more serious global issues.

Solution: It’s crucial to acknowledge that berating yourself over what you can’t control gains nothing. Instead, it’s often more helpful to focus on what you can control to make a difference. If there are causes close to your heart, consider putting together a fundraiser, selling artwork and donating the proceeds, getting out and protesting, writing to your MP, or volunteering your time to help others. Action inspires action, and sometimes, coming together with others can create a ripple effect that inspires and motivates in ways you least expect.

Time to say goodbye:

Finally, recognise when it’s time to move on from a project or idea. Maybe you'll return to it later, or perhaps it will morph into something else. Sometimes, you just need to get it out of your system, and it's okay to let go.

Tala Safié has become much better at this: “I’m able to let go of ideas that aren't working, largely due to necessity and time constraints. In the fast-paced world of news, you learn to be less precious and make tough decisions under tight deadlines. Moving on from ideas that don't work ultimately makes you a better editor.”

WTF?

Sometimes, it doesn’t matter what you do; you just can’t get into it and don’t know why. You’re lethargic, but you had a good night’s sleep. You’ve seen your pals, and they love what you’re doing, but you still feel like shit. Sometimes, you just have to give yourself a break and take it easy. I’m not a big believer in pushing through or battling against our natural urges, but I do believe in starting small.

Rather than climbing the whole mountain, can you start small and send one email, sketch out one idea, tidy your desk, go for a walk, build one page of the deck you’ve been avoiding, research one reference, and see how you go from there? Starting simple and keeping things low-stakes means you can feel the buzz of having completed something, which may kick-start your motivation to continue.

But also, we’re not robots. We don’t have to be producing and creating all of the time to be of value. Life is short, so fuck it, go and sit in the grass or have a beer at 2pm on a Tuesday afternoon. It’ll all still be there in the morning.

Recap:

Get to know yourself, when you work best, and when you’re most motivated.

Build a routine that supports your lifestyle and needs.

Procrastinate a little – it might lead to unexpected inspiration.

Seek out support when you need it.

Get your relationship with money straight.

Check in on your expectations and adjust them if needed.

Make yourself useful in ways that matter to you.

It’s okay to call time on something that no longer serves you.

Start small and build from there.

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About the Author

Danielle Pender

Danielle Pender is a writer, editor and creative consultant based in London. She is the founder and editor of Riposte magazine and Riposte Studio and has recently launched Riposte Editions, a collection of literary journals. Her debut collection of short stories, Watching Women & Girls, was published in 2023 by 4th Estate.

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