Treating revision not as correction but as spiritual and artistic deepening, building this into your creative process and client relationships.
Murasaki likely revised extensively; The Tale of Genji shows the evidence of a writer working and reworking language, structure, and characterization toward greater depth. Yet many contemporary creatives resist revision, treating it as admission of failure or drudgery to be minimized. A Murasaki-informed approach reconceives revision as the actual creative work—the opportunity to deepen, refine, and discover what your work wants to become. This shift has practical and psychological implications. You build revision time into your estimates, positioning it as value-creating rather than billable rework. You invite clients into this process as collaborators rather than critics, helping them understand that their feedback is an ingredient in deepening the work. You also develop patience with your own creative process, releasing the pressure to generate perfect first drafts. This approach typically results in work of greater sophistication, increases client trust and satisfaction, and restores creative pleasure to a profession often drained by rushing.
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