How to Stay Creative When Life Takes Over
I used to think that longing to make art again meant I was being ungrateful. Here I was, surrounded by the family I’d always wanted, feeling sorry for myself about not having time for my woodburning practice. But as I’ve shared this story, I’ve heard from women facing different overwhelming seasons. Divorce, caregiving, job loss. All are feeling that same disconnection from their creative selves.
We keep waiting for life to calm down so we can get back to making art. But what if the solution isn’t finding more time? What if it’s learning to create differently?
Simple Ways to Reconnect with Your Creative Self
Redefine what counts as creative time. Stop waiting for two-hour studio sessions (because honestly, when was the last time that happened?). Sketching pattern ideas during nap time counts. Burning a simple design after everyone’s in bed counts, and planning your next pyrography project while dinner cooks counts too.
Lower the stakes completely. You don’t have to produce gallery-worthy pieces every time you pick up your tools. Sometimes creativity is just practicing shading techniques without any plan. Or doodling patterns because your hands need to move. Experimenting with new woodburning tips to see what happens.
Keep supplies accessible. Store your basic woodburning materials in a small basket so you can set up quickly when quiet moments appear. The easier it is to start, the more likely you’ll do it.
Create alongside others. Set up your woodburning station while kids do homework or while your partner watches TV. You’re not hiding your creative practice. You’re showing that making things matters to you. It’s incredible how much this normalizes creativity in your daily life.
Turn waiting time into inspiration time. Search Pinterest for pyrography patterns. Save color combinations that catch your eye. Browse woodburning techniques on YouTube. These little sessions keep your creative brain active even when your hands can’t be.
Focus on process over perfection. The goal is staying connected to the act of creating, not producing masterpieces. Half the time, my practice pieces end up being my favorites anyway.
When Guilt Shows Up
Oh, the guilt. If you’re anything like me, there’s a voice in your head telling you that wanting time to make things is selfish when life feels impossible. Whether it’s guilt about taking time from responsibilities or feeling like you should be dealing with “real problems” instead of making art, I’ve been there. The guilt is real. It’s loud. And it’s wrong.
This guilt runs deeper than we can tackle here. It’s tangled up with everything we’ve been told about productivity and selflessness. I wrote more about overcoming the guilt that blocks creative people because, honestly, it deserves its own conversation.
The short version: you don’t have to justify why making things matters to you. It’s not selfish. It’s necessary.
What’s the biggest thing that gets in the way of your creative time? Is it guilt, logistics, or something else entirely?
