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By PJ Grimes ©PivotPointe, 2003
"In having your own business, you have to think
outside the box all the time..." - Tera Leigh
The recipe for success in starting and running your
own business often calls for hefty dashes of creativity
- from how to creatively obtain the office equipment
you'll need now while on a less-than-shoestring budget...to
what tasty dishes to feature on your new café's breakfast
menu...how to make money from a passionate hobby...designing
an eye-catching business card or Web site...and, of
course, helping a client solve a pressing problem right
on the spot. Maybe you want to be a full-time writer
and editor, an architect, a book publisher, a band manager,
environmental consultant, or perhaps even the owner
of a yoga studio or clothing store. In feeding your
career passion and others, you'll find creativity is
always an integral part of the mix.
Tera Leigh - a highly popular, award-winning, California-based
artist, author, consultant, and speaker - knows plenty
about this key ingredient for women business owners,
whether you're in the initial "I'm thinking about starting
my own business" phase or already at the helm of your
own company. While a foremost advocate for women following
their dreams, the fine of creativity is centerpiece
to Tera's own life and livelihood.
In addition to heading up her own company and teaching
workshops and consulting on topics such as creativity
and small business, Leigh is the author of two acclaimed
books: The Complete Book of Decorative Painting (North
Light Books) and How to Be Creative If You Never Thought
You Could. Her Complete Book of Decorative Painting
was a Crafts/Craftrends 2002 Award of Excellence winner
in the Painting Books category and awarded ""Top 10
Craft & Hobby Books of 2002"" status by the American
Library Association. Leigh's newest release, How to
be Creative If You Never Thought You Could, is available
now in book and craft stores, and already receiving
stellar reviews. Among Tera's many accomplishments,
she has had regular columns in Paintworks, Quick & Easy
Painting, Country Marketplace, CNA, and Tole World magazines,
and has had her original designs published in many painting
and home déécor magazines. Tera is also an experienced
radio and TV presenter, and has appeared on programs
such as ""It's Christopher Lowell"" on the Discovery
Network and "The Carol Duvall Show" on HGTV.
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What is your definition of creativity, how is it
important to our lives, and why is creativity or honoring
your creative spirit so important, especially for women?
TL: I define creativity as innovative problem solving.
Sometimes people confuse creativity with being artistic.
Although someone who is artistic is often creative,
being artistic is not a necessary component of creativity.
The most successful lawyers I knew (back when I was
a lawyer myself) were the most creative. Those same
lawyers were not necessarily artistic in any way.
It is important in our lives because creativity gives
us our voice. It is one of the few things in life that
we actually "own." We are told to stop at red lights,
wait to be seated, and a host of other instructions
that control virtually every movement we make. Creativity
is the moment in which you get to solve a problem (whether
it is what to cook for dinner, what color to paint a
sky, or what argument would most efficiently make your
client sympathetic to a jury, for example); those moments
belong to our brain - they are the moments in which
we are most authentically ourselves.
I think honoring our creative spirit is especially
important for women because we tend to live our lives
in service to our families and/or job and/or friends,
etc. We get so caught up in doing for others, we lose
track of who we are. Listening to yourself when you
have the chance to insert your creativity - the authentic
part of who you are - into those tasks (even if it is
"just" cleaning your daughter's room) can be tremendously
empowering if we claim them as such.
What misconceptions do people have about being
creative or creativity in general, do you think, that
stops them from including more in their lives each and
every day?
TL: In my book, "How to be Creative If You Never Thought
You Could," I outlined the eight most common things
that women wrote to me about through my Web site. They
included:
i "I'm not an artist because I'm not/or/ I can't"...
i "I have to wait for the muse to inspire me"... i "My
friends or family will criticize or make fun of me if
I claim to be an artist"...
But the thing they all have in common is fear. We use
our inner critic - or misconceptions that we have adopted
as our own belief systems - to give us an excuse to
procrastinate from doing the creative work we were born
to do.
You have a decision to make. Do you want to live a
creative life and give your authentic voice the power
to sing, or do you want to live small and continue to
quiet that voice as you were taught to do by society?
If you want to sing, then you have to let go of misconceptions
and remember that those things are just words. Putting
something into words isn't true unless you choose to
believe it. I can say that I am the Queen of England,
but that doesn't make it true.
However, it can be true to me if I choose to embrace
it fully. We call someone with that extreme a belief
"crazy," but I've heard a lot of "crazy" beliefs come
out of supposedly sane people when discussing their
art or creativity. On a daily basis we give ourselves
rules or tell ourselves things that simply make no sense,
but as long as we believe them our perception is our
reality.
You started out in law and marketing, eventually
mixing it with the arts, to full-time artist and author.
Tell us about that time of transition, that major pivot
point in your life. What led you to become a full-time
artist and onto author?
TL: As with many things in life, it felt like a slow
transition. But with the benefit of hindsight, I can
see that it was always what I was meant to do. Every
time I embarked on a new career, I eventually ended
up writing about it in some way or another.
There were two events that changed my life forever.
The first was the death of my best friend (at age 42)
from cancer, and the second was my husband's diagnosis
(at age 30) with Graves Disease and his subsequent radiation
treatment, etc. During the last days of her sickness,
my friend, Debbie, kept saying to me, "Don't be so arrogant
to believe that you have forever to live your dreams."
We talked a lot about what was really important. Debbie
and I had both struggled with our weight, for example.
I joked that at least the chemo had her into some cute
clothes at a small size, and she said to me , "I wish
I'd known how stupid it was to spend my energy worrying
about that. I'll never have that time back."
When Ken (my husband) came through his treatment, he
wanted to make a life change as well. We transitioned
us both out of our company because he was recruited
away to a new company, and I took a part time job that
gave me the freedom to work from home and write and
design.
I should say that I'd started working part time as
an artist and author the year before, so I wasn't starting
cold. These experiences just gave me the courage to
make the leap and trust that the net would be there.
It hasn't been easy. Going from a steady income to a
trickle is a tough challenge - and can add a lot of
stress. I often remind myself, however, that the worst
day writing beats the best day as an attorney or CEO
of a technology company!
How does being an artist make you feel? What's wonderful
and good about your chosen creative direction as an
artist/designer and author?
TL: As I encourage others to use their creativity to
find their authentic voice, my art and writing gives
me my own. Knowing that doing this thing that I love
also gives inspiration to others is the icing on the
cake.
Where does your inspiration and ideas come from?
What fosters your muse, so to speak?
TL: You've hit a hot button for me! I don't believe
in muses. I believe that we have everything we need
to be as creative as we need at all times. It is simply
that at certain times we are better prepared to get
to it than others. Much of this is listening to ourselves.
Let's start with the negative. If you have a cold, for
example, you aren't going to be as good at getting to
your creativity - but neither would you be as good at
bowling or housework. Certain things diminish our capacity.
In contrast, certain things elevate our capacity. For
example, I write best in silence or with classical instrumental
music on, because I find words get in the way of my
own words, but I paint best with vocal music. I love
old jazz and the Doors.
So, it is key to pay attention to the times in which
you are most creative. Do you work best in a group or
alone? Are you a night owl (my own most creative time
is from 10 p.m. to 2-4 a.m. generally) or a morning
person? Do you need sound or silence? Do you like chaos
or simplicity in your workspace? These things can become
Pavlovian triggers to help us get to our creative source
when we need it.
In terms of where my ideas come from, I have enough
experience now that I can look at a surface or get an
assignment and I have a sort of formula for working
out the skeleton and building from there. I do keep
visual "idea nurseries," which are scrapbooks filled
with a hodgepodge messy collage of bits and pieces torn
from magazines, fabric, and other visual stimulus. If
I'm at a loss as to where to start, I use the nurseries
to jumpstart my brain. Sometimes a color combination
will jump out at me. Sometimes I will notice a photo
of a room and design a piece as though it was meant
to be displayed in that room.
It is important to keep a library of things that you
can rely on when you need inspiration. In addition to
my idea nursery, I have technique and study books, I
have favorite Web sites, and I have a network of artists
who will not coddle me when I am feeling sorry for myself,
but instead, do me the great favor of kicking me in
the pants and telling me to sit back down in the chair
and work. I can sand it off or erase it or paint over
it or start over, but work begets work. Feeling sorry
for yourself begets watching bad TV movie reruns.
What is the most challenging part of being a full-time
artist/designer and author?
TL: The biggest challenge for me is making a living
at it financially. People are used to art being a part
of their lives. They see it on packaging, they see it
on TV and the Internet, and so forth. I often liken
being a full-time artist to being a plate spinner. You
have to have a half a dozen or more plates spinning
simultaneously because we often don't get paid until
publication, or we get paid a percentage of sales, so
there is a lag in payment. Also, in starting out, it
takes a long time to build a reputation for people to
want to pay you what your time is worth. I still struggle
with this with some companies. I'm simply smart enough
now to walk out the door rather than argue because I
know that around the corner there is someone who will
appreciate me.
As a creative artist, do you ever encounter obstacles
like being stuck, fear, perfectionism, procrastination,
and if so, how do you work around it/with it?
TL: I have only met one artist who told me she never
experiences being stuck. I think all of the things you
listed come back to fear - which is the subject of "How
to be Creative." The bottom line is that you have to
make a choice and work through it. I have two big triggers:
feeling overwhelmed with deadlines (ironic as this is
what gets me paid), and having a messy studio. I don't
work well without at least controlled chaos in my studio.
I guess the answer to your question is that you listen
to yourself, you find out what you need to get past
the fear, and you do it. In order to do all those things,
however, you have to be very clear on why you are doing
it. Making a living at art is hard, but art in general
is hard. If you don't have a crystal-clear vision of
what you are trying to accomplish; you will likely self-destruct
at some point.
If you could give one key piece of advice to a woman
considering following her dreams of creativity - to
pursue their creative passions - be it opening an art
gallery or teaching dance or decorating cakes, what
would that be?
TL: To quote the philosopher Virgil: "Fortune favors
the bold!" No one knows what you are capable of accomplishing.
Don't let anyone tell you what is possible for you.
If you hear no, and you don't have something right now,
nothing has changed. So be bold...ask questions... go
after your dreams.
You have two wonderful books out now. How did you
come up with the original concepts/subject areas?
TL: The first book came out of an online discussion
group when I realized that although there were some
good books out on the subject they were all from an
individual artist's point of view. I thought a general
book was needed that didn't tell the artist what to
think, but rather gave them the information to let them
choose what was best for them.
The second book came out of my Web site at www.teras-wish.com.
Creativity is my passion and when I realized how many
of the questions I received through the Web site and
newsletter were on the same topic over and over, I thought
it would make a great book. I would still like to write
another book - this time more in depth without projects
- but I have time.
I just signed a contract for a third book, and that
idea came out of a fluke in my studio. When I demo,
I use cardstock or Bristol Board because it is light
to carry. I usually bring it home and use it as scrap
paper and I had cut a piece for something and when I
came down to the studio the next morning I thought it
was a piece of cut tile laying on the carpet. This sent
panic through me as we have a Great Dane-mix puppy that
eats anything on the floor. When I picked it up and
saw that it was paper, it sent my mind flying with ideas
for creating "faux mosaics" using paper, "faux grout,"
and glazes. In addition to the book, I have a product
line under the same name coming out next year. People
say "write from your life." I think I would alter that
a bit and say, "Listen to your life." If it interests
you, then it will probably interest someone else.
You took your ideas onto creatively getting a book
deal. How'd you accomplish that? Any tips to writers
interested in putting their work into book form?
TL: I believe the universe (and God) honor intention.
So, when I decide to write a book, I tell everyone I
know about it. My husband and I had gone to Borders
Books down near Hotel Circle in San Diego, sat on the
floor, and gone through every book on hobbies, art,
and home décor, and narrowed a list of four or five
publisher imprints as to the books we liked best. We
were looking for things like photography, layout, editing,
and the like. Next, I went to Writer's Market to find
out how to submit. One of the group required an agent,
but the rest would accept author submissions for non-fiction
books. I bought a couple of books on how to write a
proposal, sample chapter, and outline.
Here is where it gets good. My first choice was North
Light Books. I was printing out the cover letter to
mail the outline to them when the phone rang and it
was an editor from North Light Books saying that they
were looking for someone to write basically the same
book I was pitching to them! I asked for her fax number
and sent over my info while we were on the phone. Within
a couple of months we had a contract signed. That was
the universe and my work coming together - some of the
many people I told I wanted to do a book with North
Light happened to mention me at various trade shows
and elsewhere, and after hearing my name a few times,
they decided to call. Because I had done all my homework
and was ready - I had my shot. It took both to make
that deal happen.
The second deal was also with North Light, but with
a different division. It was a difficult book because
it was "outside the box" of what this company normally
does in publishing. I pitched several new books to the
company once that manuscript was turned in and they
were all turned down, so I got a literary agent. When
the company realized I was walking, they came back to
me and we came to an agreement on the new "faux mosaic"
book.
In terms of tips to writers: read everything you can
on writing a proposal, get familiar with writer's resources
like Writer's Market, and keep honing your work. You
need to be able to not only prove that you have a good
idea, but prove there is an audience for it. That is
why magazine work is helpful, you can show that people
will already know your name, and may then be more likely
to buy your book. Also, once you have a book deal, be
prepared to do your own PR. The book companies have
limited time/funds for each book. Unless you are talking
about being one of the 1% that is a Tom Clancy or Anne
Rice - you are going to have to create the PR to sell
your books - so pick up publicity books as well!
Speaking of your books, tell us a little about each
one of yours, especially the newest, How to be Creative
If You Never Thought You Could, that's just come out.
What makes your pennings so unique and different, and
so well received and popular as they are and fast becoming?
TL: I think I addressed the first part of this in the
last question in discussing how they were pitched. What
makes them unique and well received - I think that comes
from working with a publisher that does good work -
because you can turn in a world class manuscript but
if the art dept butchers it or you have a bad editor,
you are in trouble - and knowing that it is up to you
to create publicity for that book. To some extent, you
are part of the story of your book. You have to get
out to book signings. You have to put together press
kits, go to trade shows, make contacts, network, and
word-of-mouth will grow.
You are also the founder of the Memory Box Artist
Project non-profit organization. What led you to start
this wonderful endeavor, and what is your vision for
its growth and future? How can our readers help you
out?
TL: We are so proud that the program just received
its non-profit status! We hope to grow the program to
the point that no family walks out of a hospital in
North America with their baby's belongings in a sack
or trash bag. That is very ambitious because after five
years (prior to becoming non-profit), we probably have
less than 10% of the hospitals needing boxes in the
program. We are hopeful that our non-profit status will
lead to greater PR opportunities for both people to
donate (tax-deductible) and decorate boxes to send to
hospitals for the families. To learn more about the
program, read letters from families and hospital staff,
and find out how to contribute your time or money to
the program, visit us online at www.memoryboxes.org.
I know you're a very prolific writer and woman
of creativity. What's coming up for you in the way of
new projects and books?
TL: PBetween now and October 2003, I do both the photography
and manuscript for my next book onfFaux mosaics. I am
also pitching books with my literary agent about creativity,
inspiration, and home décor. In 2004, I will write regular
columns for CNA (a trade publication in the arts/crafts
industry), Create & Decorate, PaintWorks, Quick and
Easy Painting, and Artist's Sketchbook magazine. I am
in negotiations for a column in a new beading magazine,
and we are waiting to get the green light for that publication
to start up. Of course, I also continue plate-spinning
with freelance work when it comes my way.
In addition to writing, I will publish about 30-40
designs in magazines and on Web sites to help people
explore arts, crafts, and creativity. I am also on reruns
on the "It's Christopher Lowell" show (segment entitled
"Fear Factor"), and will be doing at least one and possibly
two guest appearances on a PBS show dedicated to arts
and crafts. Too, I am on national tour through October
for my new book. Cincinnati, Oklahoma City, St. Louis,
and Raleigh, North Carolina are among the cities remaining
stops, plus I will continue to do Southern California
appearances.
What is your personal definition of success, especially
as it applies to women growing a successful life of
creativity?
TL: I divide success up into two areas; monetary or
career success - meaning being able to support myself
at a specific financial level through my work - and
personal success. Personal creative success, I think,
can be best summed up by bestselling author Julia Cameron's
wonderful statement: "Progress, not perfection, is the
goal." When I compare the work I did six months ago
with what I'm doing now and see progress, I know I am
succeeding every day just a little bit more. What is
better than that?
Anything else you'd like to share here?
TL: I have a personal belief that not everyone would
agree with, but I like to put it out there. That is
this: Talent is only a very small part of the equation.
We all know of TV stars or rock stars that are hardly
the best singers or actors and yet they are at the top
of their game. Some of them aren't even the most beautiful,
so you can't claim it is simply because they are pretty.
Ultimately, creative success comes to those who are
tenacious. There will be people who you may consider
more talented than you who will fail when you will succeed
because they will give up. Let go of the importance
of the word "no"; it is just another word and changes
nothing. Let go of the need for other people's approval.
Not everyone is going to appreciate what you do. All
that matters is that you keep doing it. Day by day,
keep at it. There will be times when it feels like your
career is stagnating or your art is not growing and
then suddenly it will sprout so fast you can barely
keep up. Success comes with tenacity, to those who keep
going when others would fail. Keep at it. Keep inside
of you that joy you feel when you are in tune with your
creativity and don't let it go. There is no one who
is so superior to another human being that their word
should be allowed to crush your dream. They know nothing
about what you can accomplish. So keep at it. Make time
for it. Know you are worth it. Know that the rest of
us need to hear your song too.
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