Success, Failure and the Drive to Keep Creating

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Gilbert recounts the overwhelming experience following the massive success of “Eat, Pray, Love.” She felt immense pressure and anxiety about how to follow it up, realizing that pleasing everyone was impossible. This highlights how even positive outcomes can stifle creativity due to external expectations.

For Gilbert, her “home” isn’t a physical place but the act of writing. She emphasizes loving the process of creation more than the outcome (whether success or failure). This intrinsic love becomes the anchor that keeps you grounded through the highs and lows.

Drawing on her years of early rejection as a writer, Gilbert realized that her love for writing persisted despite constant failure. This resilience built in the face of setbacks is the same inner resource needed to navigate the pressures of success.

Gilbert suggests thinking of creativity as something that comes through you, rather than being you. This creates a healthy distance from both praise and criticism, allowing you to continue your work without your ego being overly invested in the results.

Regardless of whether you’re experiencing triumph or disappointment, the key is to maintain a dedicated practice towards your passion. This consistent engagement, fueled by love for the work itself, is what ultimately sustains a creative life.

Course Content

Quiz – Success, Failure and the Drive to Keep Creating

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# Name B.E.A.R Badges BetterMe Points B.E.A.R Level
1 Siphosihle 107 12980 Level 1
2 Bulelwa 20 2000 Level 0
3 Melody 19 1840 Level 0
4 Lee-anne 16 1600 Level 0
5 Hellen 12 1200 Level 0