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Daily Affirmations for Mindful Meditation

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  • April 15, 2026
    Creativity

    I am a vessel for whatever wants to come through, and I trust the messy, imperfect process of making.

    The blank page on the kitchen table

    I sat down this morning with a notebook and a cup of tea that was already going cold. The intention was to write something—anything—but the page just sat there being white, and I just sat there being stuck. There was a tightness in my chest, a familiar visitor. Not anxiety exactly, more like a held breath. The kind that says: whatever you make won’t be good enough, so why begin? I noticed I was gripping the pen the way you grip the steering wheel in traffic. So I put it down. I closed the notebook. And instead of writing, I watched the steam curl off the tea for a while. It made shapes I couldn’t have planned.

    That was the first honest moment of the day. Not a breakthrough—just a softening. I remembered something I once read about how creativity isn’t a performance; it’s a willingness to be in relationship with what’s here. The steam was here. The tight chest was here. Even the blankness of the page was here, and it wasn’t hostile. It was just… waiting. Patient the way a field is patient before someone scatters seed.

    What happened on the cushion

    I sat for twenty minutes after that, which was unusual for a morning when I felt so knotted up. Usually resistance sends me to the dishes, the phone, any small errand that lets me pretend I’m being productive. But today I stayed. Breathing in, breathing out. Letting the thoughts about creativity—what it should look like, what it used to look like, what other people seem to do with it so effortlessly—just pass through like cars on a road I wasn’t trying to cross.

    Halfway through the sit something small happened. I heard a bird outside the window repeating the same three notes over and over, and it occurred to me that the bird wasn’t workshopping its song. It wasn’t comparing this morning’s version to yesterday’s. It was just singing because singing is what it does. I felt my shoulders drop about an inch. There was a warmth behind my sternum, not dramatic, just the kind of warmth you feel when you stop arguing with yourself. I didn’t try to turn it into a lesson. I just let it be warm.

    The thing I actually made

    Later, around mid-afternoon, I went back to the notebook. Not with a plan. Not with the pressure to produce something worthy. I drew a circle. Then another circle inside it. Then some lines radiating out, and before I knew it I’d spent forty minutes making something that looked like a cross between a sun and a sea urchin and a child’s idea of a galaxy. It wasn’t art. It wasn’t not-art. It was just the thing my hand wanted to do when I stopped telling it what to do.

    And here’s the part that surprised me: I liked it. Not because it was good—it was genuinely kind of strange—but because it was mine. It had come from the same morning that started with a blank page and a tight chest. The whole arc of the day was in it somehow. The stuckness, the steam, the bird, the breath. I taped it to the fridge next to a grocery list and a photo of my niece, and it looked right there. It looked like it belonged among the ordinary, living things.

    What stayed with me tonight

    Sitting here now, the day winding down, I keep thinking about how much energy I’ve spent over the years treating creativity like a test I could fail. As though there’s a committee somewhere reviewing submissions. But today felt different—not because I suddenly became fearless, but because I let the fear sit next to me while I drew circles anyway. The fear didn’t leave. It just stopped being in charge. That felt like enough. More than enough, actually. It felt like the whole point.

    I think what I’m learning—slowly, imperfectly, the way I learn everything—is that creativity isn’t about the product. It’s about the willingness to show up without knowing what will happen. To make the ugly thing, the weird thing, the thing that doesn’t match the image in your head. To let the morning be difficult and the afternoon be surprising and to not need the two to cancel each other out. Tomorrow I might sit down and draw another strange galaxy. Or I might just watch the steam again. Either way, I want to stay close to this feeling: that something in me wants to make things, and it doesn’t need my permission. It just needs me to stop standing in the doorway.

    If any of this resonated—if you, too, have stared at a blank page or an empty canvas or even just an open afternoon and felt that familiar clench—maybe today is the day to make the messy, imperfect thing. Not for anyone’s approval. Just to feel your own aliveness move through your hands.

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