Archive for ‘Graduate School’

March 28, 2010

Engagement in Creative Practice

Now that I’m on the other side of my Positive Psychology final (woo-hoo!), I can reflect a bit more about my topic. I know that sounds backwards, because reflection should happen during the academic process, but I’m thinking about my topic in a different way now.

For my final, I focused on work engagement. Psychologists began identifying work engagement out of the research on burnout. They wanted to find a positive experience that was the inverse to the negative experience. They determined that engagement is a  positive, work-associated mental state that includes three factors:

  • vigor: the energy and mental resilience that one brings to a task
  • dedication: one’s alignment with a role, organization, and/or task
  • absorption: the focus and concentration that one brings to a task, similar to flow

In my final, I focused on the implications of engagement on the work environment, but I wonder about engagement’s implications for a creative practice.

As I think about it, I’ m curious about the potential for vigor in a creative practice, especially if the artist has demonstrated vigor in other areas of life. As I mentioned, the corollary to engagement is burnout.  When someone has burned out, this person experiences exhaustion (the opposite spectrum to vigor), cynicism (the opposite spectrum to dedication), and becomes less effective at the work.  If a person is engaged in professional work, exhibiting vigor, can this vigor translate to a regular creative practice? Or does this person use up all the vigor on the work and become exhausted in the creative practice? I guess my question is: Does vigor build on itself or do we have a finite amount to use?

Of course, it’s no surprise that I’m asking this right now. I’m at the end of a very hard week, professionally, academically and creatively, and I’m exhausted.  I have exhibited very little vigor in  these main areas of my life. Luckily, I’m starting a full week of vacation (right now, as  a matter of fact), so I have time to replenish my energy. But as I look forward to the last push towards summer, which can be a very difficult time of year at my workplace, I’m hoping to maintain my energy, both professionally and in my creative life.

For those of you out there who work and create, do you find that your energy is “used up” in one sphere, leaving you nothing in the other? Or have you found a way to build your energy in both parts of your life? I’m curious to find if anyone has found the magic bullet for spreading their energy out equitably.

January 2, 2010

Flow

Next Saturday, I begin my second class (and first elective) in my master of leadership program. I chose to take a class on Positive Psychology. In a nutshell, positive psychology studies “what goes right” in people’s lives and how to replicate those experiences on an individual and organizational level.

After watching the below video, required for class, I know that I have chosen a good class. I think that this class will really help me to reflect on how my creative practice fulfills me.  Expect a lot of blogging on positive psychology over the next few months.

In this video, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi describes a bit of research into flow experiences. People experience flow when they are engaged in an activity that they enjoy, that challenges them, and allows them to lose themselves for a moment. I would say that writing poetry or collaging, for me, can be  flow experiences.

A few things struck me while watching this video:

  • First, Csikszentmihalyi traces the word “ecstatic” to its Greek roots, where it means to place outside.  I often feel that my creative practice is a space outside of daily life, so this definition of when creation induces an ecstatic state resonates with me. However, because I place it outside of daily life, I don’t connect with it as much as I should. Perhaps I should be thinking of writing and art-making instead as a way to create a space outside of life, rather an already existing space.
  • He shows an excellent quote regarding the flow experience of poetry, at approximately 11:27 in the video. (It’s a long video.)
  • Elements of flow activity (as described by Csikszentmihalyi here) include: complete involvement, ecstasy, inner clarity, a sense that the task is achievable, serenity, timelessness and intrinsic motivation. When describing intrinsic motivation, he says that whatever task produces the flow experience is its own reward.  I’m thinking of posting that phrase above my writing space.
  • Flow experiences are most often experienced when the task is more challenging than average and the skills used to complete the task are higher than average. He has a great graphic around 16:40-ish (again long video), which illustrates the other types of experiences and how they relate to skill and task level.
  • Apathy is the opposite of flow and it is something we all experience more often than not. Television (and sitting in the bathroom) typically produce apathy.

This video is exactly what I need to see a few days before plunging back into the busy work world.  I hope that you take the time to watch it, as its very illuminating.  Enjoy!

Note: This is may be my very first embedded video on a blog and I am so flipping glad that it works. Yay for learning a new skill.

December 4, 2009

Protected: Awakening Potential through Team Leadership in Buffy the Vampire Slayer

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October 21, 2009

To the Breach

“Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more.” — Henry V

This week for school, I’ve been reading Henry V, watching Henry V and writing about Henry V. Pretty soon, I’ll be breathing and eating Henry V.  While writing my paper this evening, I’ve realized that lately I’ve been pushing myself into the breach, once more. 

Last week, I was swallowed up fully by my job and my graduate studies.  Due to some changes in the administration at my work, I’ve been (probably temporarily)  given some of my boss’s responsibilities, so that she can take on some extra responsibilities.  As daunting  as this shift seems  I am loving the opportunity.  I find myself more excited to go to work each day, even as I work longer days.  In between all of this, I still had readings and papers for my class, which I’m totally digging. 

I’m left wondering what all this will mean for my writing practice. If I’m truly honest with myself, I was not successfully balancing the work-school-writing practice all that well before this change. Now that it’s happened, I don’t see where I’m going to find the time for writing. 

Right now, I’m okay with that.  I know I don’t have to make a decision for my writing or my work that will be final forever. I know that my writing, my career, and my education are lifelong pursuits, and that they will all wax and wane throughout my life.  I know that for this moment in my life, my work and my studying fills me and fills my need for self-expression and creation. 

So, if I’m a little quiet here lately, this is why.  I’m making some adjustments to my life, so that I can fit all of this in.  And really, I’m having a good time.

September 16, 2009

I’m Still Here…

…I’m just in the middle of a very intense, short week. 

Intense, because work is back in full force. Now that school is back in session, most of my days are full with tasks and meetings, and it can be difficult to balance the two needs. So, I’ve been getting in to work early, leaving late, and taking shorter breaks, so that I can squeeze in as much as possible.

Intense, because I have four committees that I help organize at work, and three of them start this week and next week.  Argh.

Intense, because I had one day off (after working Tuesday through Friday), so it feels like this endless stream of work.  Of course it doesn’t help that I caught an end-of-summer cold. I’ve only had it since Sunday, but it feels like I’m just dragging.  At this point, I want my nose to fall off.

Intense, because in the middle of all of this, I have school work to finish.  Even though classes are every other weekend, we have work due on the “off weeks.”  I had a short paper due on the first day of class and I have a mini-essay due online by Saturday.  It’s been a while since I’ve had actual homework, a couple of years at least. I’m loving every second of it, even though it feels as if my brain is going to explode.  (This week, I’m reading The Prince, for the first time since college. Now that I’m 32, I’m much better prepared to understand this text, than I was at 17.) But I find myself, at the five minutes of break I have a day, thinking about the abstract principles behind leadership.  Scary…

Short, because I take Friday off so that I can spend three days in the Roy Wilkins Auditorium for the Brawl of America. Yes, I will be screaming until my throat is even more raw than it already is to cheer on the Minnesota Rollergirls as they sweep the Women’s Flat Track Derby Association’s regional tournament. If you live in the Twin Cities and you aren’t going, you should check it out. 

Now, all I have to do is make it until tomorrow.

September 13, 2009

How to Live With Insomnia

1. Identify that you actually have insomnia.

Intermittent insomnia is a constant in my life. Ever since I was little, I would have stretches of sleeplessness.  The bouts erupt in times of stress or change and they stick around until suddenly, they don’t.  At the worst part of my insomniac’s life, at a time of deep stress, I went without more than an hour’s sleep for 7 straight days.  On the 7th day, I went to the emergency room and was told to take warm baths and relax.  I eventually found a doctor who would help me.  I found relief by creating a bedtime routine, using some sleep medication, and removing the major stresses from my life.

This morning, I don’t know if I have true insomnia yet.  I went to bed at midnight, which is late for me, after a fun night hanging out with some friends.  My cat woke me up at 4:40, which he is wont to do when he is hungry, and then I couldn’t fall asleep after I kicked him out. I found myself mentally repeating one section of lyrics from The Kinks’ “A Well-Respected Man.” I finally gave in and got out of bed at 5:45.

2. Use your non-sleeping time wisely.

When I get really bad insomnia, I get out of bed, pull out our couch and try to sleep there.  On the couch, I can leave the light on, read, watch television, cry, whatever it takes to get black to sleep. I often know that it’s time to get out of bed and move the couch when my husband’s (very) light snores prove to me that he gets to sleep, while I can’t. When I want to smack him or wake him up, I get out of bed. 

Today, I woke up and decided to accomplish things I don’t have a lot of time for, before my day really begins.  So, my goals are to do some homework (done – sort of), do my leg exercises (coming soon), and clean as much of the house as I can before my husband gets up and we have to go to the Farmer’s Market. 

3.  Identify the reasons why you aren’t sleeping. 

 I don’t know why I’m not sleeping today.  Typically, in the past, I’ve endured insomnia when I’ve had really bad stretches at work.  I wouldn’t characterize my work life as bad right now. It’s actually going very well. There’s just a lot of work to be done, which takes a lot of energy.  Sometimes, this extension of energy results in lack of sleep for me, as if I can’t turn off.

This weekend, my nontraditional students returned to campus in full force. I helped to organize our “greeters”, the people who assist students and faculty in finding the right classrooms and making the students feel welcomed.  We had greeters Friday night and Saturday morning, so my weekend has been long stretches of work punctuated my little moments of sleeping and eating. Things went wrong during the opening, as they most likely will when 200 classes start at once, but a lot of things went really right. Our opening picnic yesterday, for instance, had the highest turnout ever. 

(I am proud to say, on a side note that I am not stress eating or overeating this week. At times like these, I often don’t sleep and gorge on candy or fatty foods. This week, I’ve been chomping on the veggies and eating EnviroKidz granola bars in lieu of massive bags of jellybeans.) 

 In addition to this stressful start, I started my own graduate program yesterday.  I already have a master’s degree in Creative Writing, and if I had buckets of money, I’d start on a doctorate in education. But, I get tuition remission at my school, so I’ve started my master of arts in leadership.  Since most EDd programs focus on leadership, I think I’m starting the best program for me right now. 

Class yesterday was invigorating. I forgot how much I missed being in the classroom as a student.  I loved listening to and partaking in discussions about shared texts.  Basically, I’m a big nerd. I also didn’t realize how weird it would be to sit on the other side of the classroom, after years of teaching on my own. 

I know I’ve made the right choice in starting this program. It felt right being in the classroom.  But, I also know that this will be really hard.  I know that I can balance doing homework, paid work, and my creative work.  I know that balance will actually feel like swinging between drowning in readings and papers, being buried in deadlines at the day job, and squeezing in poems on the bus and at night.  I have to accept the choice that I’ve made and the effect it will have on my life.

4. Create a bedtime ritual and stick to it until sleep resumes.

I’ve tried lots of tricks for resuming sleep after insomnia. Warm milk. Hot baths. Lukewarm baths. Cold baths.  Sleep medication, which I’m not super in love with unless it’s an emergency (see above). Not reading in bed. Reading in bed. Getting up when I can’t sleep. Staying in bed despite my lack of sleep. Counting backwards from 100. Meditation. Light exercise before bed. Not eating before bed. Some of these worked and some of these didn’t work as well as I would have liked.

The only thing that really works for me 100% of the time is to create a bedtime ritual and then stick to it every night. It triggers in my brain that I am winding down and sleep will follow shortly.  During the really bad insomnia time, I took a lukewarm bath with lavender essential oil in the water each night before bed.  Then, I went to bed and if I didn’t fall asleep within 30 minutes, I got up and did something else until I was tired again.  Rinse and repeat. Eventually it worked.

I know that I am not close to that time yet. I’ve had one morning where I’ve woken up too early, so I’m going to keep this in my back pocket. I am hoping that I’ll be tired enough tonight that I’ll pass out as my head hits the pillow.  If not, I may have to pick up some more (very expensive, I must say) lavender oil.

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