The magic of zero expectations and the happiness it can bring.
A big (if not the biggest) killer of creativity – and happiness, in general – is the need to be exceptional.
It’s a key ingredient for creative paralysis. It‘s also rocket fuel for feelings of gross inadequacy.
If we didn’t feel inadequate already, then piling massively pressure-enducing expectations on ourselves about something we haven’t even done/become yet is a guaranteed way to get us in that state.
When we aim disproportionately too high, the ugly sister of inadequacy — the critical inner voice — is then, by default, given free reign.
It relishes this as an opportunity to remind us in a myriad of ways just how unrealistic our ambitions are – and how unlikely it is we will achieve them.
“We’re never going to get there,” it whispers. “So, why bother?”
This is not to say we shouldn’t aim high in life. But there are times when it helps to scale it back a bit.
The Joy Of Zero Expectations
Having zero expectations is a joy in itself — regardless of what comes from the thing we have zero expectations about (which is literally the point).
Creating-without-expectation, in particular, is incredibly healthy and a great happiness booster.
It is creativity for creativity’s sake, giving us that one sacred place, free of obligation, where we can just be.
It has nothing to do with societal trends, what is popular, what we think we should be doing. And because of this, it helps us break out of hive mind thinking.
The Lives Of Others
Often our goals (and ultimately our identities) our influenced largely by people we see in the world who have already “made it”.
We want to be like them. We think they have found the perfect formula, which, if followed to the letter will make us as happy and successful as we think they are.
Before we realise it, we have modelled our ideas and lives on them.
We think — “there’s the formula — they’ve got it right”.
So, we operate on the assumption that if we do what they do, we’ll be like them and we’ll have the kinds of lives they have.
But when we do this, we risk denying ourselves the ability to chart our own paths.
As Joseph Campbell once said: