how to be more creative
Blog,  Creative Living

How to Be More Creative in Everyday Life

If youโ€™re wondering how to be more creative, thereโ€™s a good chance you already are. But you may not feel as connected to your creativity right now.

Your creative side doesnโ€™t just disappear. It may retreat or hibernate when life gets loud, busy, or overly structured. For many women, creativity is one of the first things to be deprioritized when responsibilities pile up. In that way, creativity can feel like a luxury, only afforded to certain people. Luckily, thatโ€™s not how it has to be โ€“ or should be.

This guide isnโ€™t about becoming more creative overnight or suddenly producing something impressive. Itโ€™s about reconnecting with creativity as a natural state, one that already exists within you.

Why Creativity Can Feel Blocked

Most creative blocks arenโ€™t about a lack of ideas or inspiration. Instead, they tend to be about:

  • mental exhaustion
  • constant productivity pressure
  • fear of being โ€œbadโ€ at something
  • not making space for imagination to wander

Creativity thrives on openness, not urgency. When everything feels rushed or evaluated, it makes sense that inspiration feels far away.

How to Be More Creative in Everyday Life

Creativity doesnโ€™t require a studio, special tools, a big budget or endless free time for hobbies. Making creativity a bigger part of your life starts with attention, awareness, and a few small adjustments.

Here are a few gentle shifts that help creativity re-emerge naturally.

1. Make Room for Boredom

Creativity often shows up in those quiet, seemingly never-ending moments of boredom. You know, when youโ€™re not scrolling, multitasking, or filling every pause with a distraction.

Let your mind wander. Let yourself daydream. Look up at the sky as a tree blows in the wind. Sit in front of a fireplace as the embers flicker and burn. Itโ€™s in these moments of stillness, silence, and reflection where big creative ideas are born.

2. Lower the Bar for What โ€œCountsโ€

Not everything creative needs to be shared, saved, or perfected.

Doodling, rearranging a shelf, experimenting with words, cooking intuitivelyโ€ฆ all of these are acts of creative expression and self-care.

3. Follow Curiosity, Not Output

Instead of asking: โ€œWhat should I make?โ€

Try framing the question as: โ€œWhat feels interesting right now?โ€

If you pursue what naturally piques your interest, even if unskilled or unpracticed at it, youโ€™ll likely find more joy in creating than if you set out with a perfect, finished product in mind. This is where your muse comes into play โ€“ sheโ€™ll guide you toward what you need.

4. Create for the Feeling, Not the Result

Creativity isnโ€™t about proving something. Itโ€™s about experiencing and freeing something from deep within your subconscious. If the process feels grounding, expansive, or absorbing, youโ€™re doing it right.

If it feels laborious, stressful, and pressured, you may want to take a step back and remind yourself that the process is meant to be opening and enjoyable.

Creative Practices to Gently Reignite Inspiration

If you want more tangible ways to reconnect with creativity, these posts may help:

Each one approaches creativity from a slightly different angle depending on where you are in your creative journey. Because of course, creativity itself isnโ€™t one-size-fits-all.

A Small Reminder That Makes a Big Difference

Sometimes creativity isnโ€™t blocked; itโ€™s just forgotten.

Thatโ€™s why visual reminders can be powerful. A single phrase, seen daily, can gently pull you back into a more open, imaginative state of mind.

Iโ€™ve created a collection of creative quote prints in my Etsy shop. These quote prints are minimal, calming designs meant to live where you work or create. Theyโ€™re small reminders to:

  • slow down and engage in wonder
  • trust your imagination and your muse
  • and honor creativity as a passion and a practice

Theyโ€™re especially helpful if you want creativity to feel like a way of living, not another task.

Quote Print
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Creativity as a Practice, Not a Personality Trait

Creativity isnโ€™t reserved for artists or โ€œcreative types.โ€ Itโ€™s a way of relating to the world: with curiosity, sensitivity, flexibility, and openness.

You donโ€™t necessarily need more discipline to be more creative. But you do need to give yourself the permission and space to explore, wonder, ask questions, and engage.

Want Ongoing Creative Support?

If youโ€™re craving a deeper, more consistent relationship with your creativity and yourself, explore The Mindful Muse workbook collection and begin with The Guide to Creative & Intentional Living: a digital workbook featuring self-assessments, journaling prompts, and simple rituals to support creative and intentional living. Discover the full Mindful Muse collection for deeper self-reflection and personal growth.

self reflection workbooks the mindful muse

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