"THE PERFECT MOMENT WILL COMES"

How many times have you thought that?
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Inspiration has often been presented to us as a fickle deity that arrives when it wants, a sudden flash that we just have to wait for. But that’s not how it works.
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Inspiration is built, cultivated, and encountered through doing.
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The secret—if we want to call it that—is simple:
Don’t wait to feel inspired to create. Create anyway.
THE FALSE WAIT
Standing still, waiting for the perfect idea and the right moment might seem harmless, but it’s actually a trap. Often, it's the most elegant disguise for fear and anxiety:
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• Fear of starting
• Fear of failing
• Fear of not being good enough
But the truth is that no one knows what they’re doing at the beginning—not even professionals or your favorite artists.
If you want to open your mind and welcome new ideas, you have to start, make, make mistakes, and make again.
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"Make it exist first."
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For now, don’t focus on the final result—just focus on the doing.
CREATIVITY IS A MUSCLE
Imagine creativity as a physical part of your body you want to develop.
How do you do it? You train it.
You don’t go to the gym to be strong right away—you go to become strong over time.
The same goes for drawing, writing, music, photography:
Drawing (or writing, playing, photographing) regularly is an exercise, not a performance.
You don’t need to create masterpieces. In fact, the more you focus on that idea, the more likely you’ll lose motivation to learn from your mistakes, to try again, to develop your own style, and to express what you feel.
So how do you train this muscle? Create a micro-routine.
Consistency doesn’t come from rigid discipline. It comes from rituals you enjoy, that feel good, that don’t scare you.
Below is a simple idea you can start today to build your own routine.
PRACTICAL EXERCISE
Get yourself a sketchbook or notebook and make a rule: don’t show it to anyone—not even on Instagram stories.
Only you can write in it, only you can look at it.
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In this notebook, you must draw every day. (If you skip a day, no problem—just start again the next day.)
Start with quick, simple things, don’t overthink it:
What you see, what you dreamed last night, abstract doodles, or pick random words from the dictionary and draw them…
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They don’t need to be anything special, quick pencil sketches without shading or detail are fine.
The only real goal is consistent practice that becomes a habit.
WHY IT WORKS
Because your mind only unlocks when it understands it can move without being judged.
And the more you practice, the more your brain gets used to not being afraid.
Creativity stops being something exclusive you have to “deserve” and returns to being a free space where you can express yourself.