
The other day my husband was on my Facebook page and someone’s status said they had ” lost their mojo.” He had something like, “Is that their dog?” Supressing giggles, I explained that no, mojo was not a dog but rather a word to talk about creativity. When people say they have “lost their mojo” they simple mean that the creativeness that usually flows just isn’t coming. Losing your mojo is not a good thing…and when it happens, you almost always want it back.
Recently ZenHabits posted a great list of ways to boost, regain, or maintain creavity. Most of the time I am oozing with ideas (and I can SO relate to the quote at the end of the article : Sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.” — Lewis Carroll .) But I have moments of busyness (or pregnancy) when the creative ideas seem to have run dry. Here are his suggestions for opening the flood gates again. I especially love the ones in bold.
- Play.
- Don’t consume and create at the same time — separate the processes.
- Shut out the outside world.
- Reflect on your life and work daily.
- Look for inspiration all around you, in the smallest places.
- Start small.
- Just get it out, no matter how crappy that first draft.
- Don’t try for perfect. Just get it out there, asap, and get feedback.
- Constantly make it better.
- Ignore the naysayers.
- But let criticism help you grow.
- Teach and you’ll learn.
- Shake things up, see things in new ways.
- Apply things in other fields to your field, in ways not done before.
- Drink ridiculous amounts of coffee.
- Write all ideas down immediately.
- Turn your work into play.
- Play with kids.
- Get out, move, see new things, talk to new people.
- Read wildly different things. Especially stuff you disagree with.
- Get lots of rest. Overwork kills creativity.
- Don’t force it. Relax, play, it will start to flow.
- Allow your mind to wander. Allow distractions, when you’re looking for inspiration.
- Then shut them off when you’re going to create.
- Do it when you’re excited.
- When you’re not, find something else to be excited about.
- Don’t be afraid to be stupid and silly.
- Small ideas are good. You don’t need to change the world — just change one thing.
- When something is killing your creativity, kill it.
- Stop reading creativity advice, clear away everything, and just create.
- Most of all, have fun doing it.
Good luck in finding you mojo!















Awesome list! Thank you so much for sharing it and the link to that fantastic site!
Love this list!! One of the hard things for me is the idea of allowing distraction but then SHUTTING it off to allow me to create … darn internet!! Too many ideas out there! Thanks for sharing this – very appropriate for me these days
I love this list I copied it and will post it. Definitely caffeinated!!!!
Awesome stuff Janet. My favorite is about the coffee. Always easier to create caffeinated! Lol
I had another thought along the lines of play… I was recently re-organizing my scrap stash and getting rid of stuff i had not ever used, and tagging (I began with a new [to me] style of organizing for ACDSee) I had not scrapped anything really in a month or more… but going thru file by file, getting rid of things, and seeing where what products i like… i have been creating like mad, not just digi scrapping, but i leave today for a week of running the crafts at our church’s Bible camp…. and I have exciting ideas… not the usual leaf prints… I will miss this site for a week but I find inspiration to not grow weary of doing good… thanks