Treating sustained, detailed observation of human behavior, nature, and interior states as the foundational work that feeds songwriting.
Murasaki Shikibu was above all an observer—of court life, human psychology, seasonal beauty, contradictory desires. Her creative genius flowed from radical attention to specificity. In songwriting practice, observation is not separate from composition; it is composition's root. This means: keep observation notebooks; watch how people actually move, speak, hesitate; notice the exact light at certain times of day; attend to your own contradictory feelings without judgment. Shikibu observed how people deceive themselves, what they notice and ignore, how shame operates, how desire masks itself as something else. This observational practice is what generates authentic lyrical content. Without it, you write from assumption and cliché. With it, you write from evidence. The craft discipline is systematic: dedicate time to observation separate from writing time. Notice small details others miss. Ask yourself what you actually observed versus what you assumed or felt. This practice transforms songwriting from self-expression into documentation of human experience. Your songs become more credible, more moving, more alive because they're rooted in precise attention to reality.
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