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Duane Toops's avatar

Ancient cultures believed that to know the name of something was to have power over it, but I think naming something allows you to better sit with it, to have a greater access to empathy. To greet the depression with grace and acceptance. To say to the depression "I see you, I will take care of you". When you can hold something with tenderness, it softens, and its easier to carry the load.

How do you stay creative in depression? I don't know either really. But, for me, it's ritual and routine. It's muscle memory. Going mindfully through the motions is no bad thing. It's a hand rail for my days. It's something solid to hold onto when the ground is shaking. It's something sure to cling to until the thunder quiets and the sun comes out again. It is in the nature of things to change. We work, we rest, we make, we wait, we breathe, we repeat....

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Zach Bokhour's avatar

This is perhaps an oversimplification, but whenever I have a case of the fuck-its I think of a quote I heard on the old Spine Magazine podcast (wish I could remember which episode or who said it): “no input, no output.” It’s a good reminder to me that the reason I started making things was because I saw things I wish I had made, and that creativity begets creativity. The best thing for me to do in those difficult moments is seek out other creative work of any kind. Sometimes it inspires me and other times it makes me jealous, which can be enough of a fire to get me back to work. But mostly, even if it does neither of those things, it’s brain food. None of us is a machine that can produce endlessly; we need fuel to keep going.

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