Understanding creative capability as cyclical rather than constant, aligned with natural rhythms of dormancy, growth, and flourishing.
Japanese aesthetics deeply honor seasonal cycles, and Murasaki Shikibu embedded this wisdom into her narrative structure and character development. Rather than expecting constant productivity, this framework recognizes that creative energy naturally waxes and wanes like seasons. Spring brings renewal and beginning; summer, intensity and expansion; autumn, harvest and reflection; winter, dormancy and integration. Many creators suffer confidence crises by comparing their current phase to others' peak seasons. The seasonal model reframes this: a dormant winter is not failure but necessary integration before spring emergence. Your creative practice might involve different rhythms—some seasons for bold experimentation, others for refinement; times for public output, times for private development. Aligning with seasonal cycles rather than fighting them reduces shame and burnout while deepening self-knowledge. You learn when you naturally work best and stop judging yourself against arbitrary linear progress. This cyclical understanding builds sustainable creative confidence because it acknowledges that creativity, like all living systems, thrives through variation and rest.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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