Hartford Courant (Sunday)

The key to creativity? Be a better listener, author says

- By Nicole Brodeur

For more than 25 years, millions of people have awakened and grabbed not their phones, but paper, filling stream-of-consciousn­ess “Morning Pages”

— a creativity-boosting ritual first prescribed in author Julia Cameron’s breakthrou­gh book, “The Artist’s Way.”

Now, Cameron has published “The Listening Path,” which lays out a six-week method of creative and personal transforma­tion through better listening to not just others, but the silence around you.

Q: What inspired “The Listening Path”? Was the book in the works for a long time, was it inspired by recent events, or one event in particular?

A: “The Listening Path” was a long time in the making. I moved from busy and noisy New York to calm and quiet Santa Fe, New Mexico. The change was abrupt and healing. In the quiet of my new home I began thinking about sound. When I went to lunch with my publisher Joel Fotinos, he asked me what I was thinking about and I said, “Listening.” “Oh,” he said, “I’d love to hear more on that.” So his curiosity, and my own experience, combined to be the catalyst for the book.

Q: Why is this a good time for a book like “The Listening Path”?

A: I think that our enforced solitude has caused many of us to be more introspect­ive. “The Listening Path” provides a channel for our often chaotic energies to quiet and deepen. Now is a good time for a book on listening, as we are all listening ‘The Listening Path: The Creative Art of Attention’

Q: Do you think that people are more open to creative and personal transforma­tion after their experience­s in lockdown?

A: Yes. I believe that lockdown has shown us a need to be in touch and comfortabl­e with our authentic selves. It’s “now or never,” we may catch ourselves thinking, as we turn to a spiritual toolkit.

Q: How has the pandemic impacted people’s creativity and sense of self ?

A: Our identity has come to be seen as something separate and distinct from our previous markers. We no longer feel it is our job, or our material possession­s, which define us. Instead, we are led through the long hours of the pandemic to seek spiritual grounding. I believe this is good, important, and the silver lining of difficult times.

Q: What makes it difficult for people to really listen? Does it

have anything to do with social media and the ways in which our attention is pulled in so many directions?

A: People find it difficult to listen because they are overwhelme­d by the input coming to us from all directions — social media, the television, the constant barrage of news. All of these things make it difficult for people to focus on the root of all listening: the still, small voice that wells up from within.

A: I believe “The Listening Path” is needed in our current times and will be needed, too, in our future.

A: The first tool I would suggest, as I always suggest, is the practice of Morning Pages: three pages of longhand, stream-of-consciousn­ess writing, done “first things first.” The pages quiet our chaotic thoughts and allow us to be authentica­lly present.

The second tool is focusing on the sounds in our environmen­t, perhaps keeping a weekly log of the sounds, pleasant and unpleasant, that we daily encounter. This allows us to tune in, rather than tune out, on our soundscape.

The third tool involves listening to others without interrupti­on; allowing our intimates to fully finish their thoughts, which often surprise us. These three simple tools awaken our inner listener, allowing us to be more present and fully engaged.

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