Skip to content

Own your creativity. Or at least, flying-cross-body-press it.

     

    LuchaLibre

    photo

    I have a creative soul. Creative talent can usher immeasurable blessings while simultaneously giving you the flying head-scissors.

    I started my blog as a writing practice. It led to what professionals might call “creative self-discovery” and feels much like el tornillo; a flying cross-body press with a full twist around the axis.

    Instead of giving out wardrobe advice, or re-posting my networking tips, I’d like to wish you Feliz Dia del BlogHer ‘12 by sharing my Lucha Libre moves for owning your creativity.

    Become a luchador (fighter), not a referee. You can’t fight while you referee someone else’s match. Morning traffic reporters in Chicago call it gapers’ delay when traffic jams stem not from an accident, but instead from all the rubber-necking. Envy, jealousy, and spite stem from your resistance to doing your own work. Picture envy, jealousy and spite as las minis estrellas and give them la guillotina (leg drop those midget wrestlers!). You might need to facebook-stalk for a respectable amount of time and churros-fortify, but then break the gapers’ delay and return to la lucha, campeon! Go fight, Champion! Write something or take a photo or call a friend who makes you feel muy bien.

    Get in el quadralitero (ring). Want to be published? Write and submit, write more, submit more! Want to speak at a conference or on air? Submit a proposal, keep pitching. You want a book deal? Write the book (or the proposal). Wish you had a column? Make contacts and keep pitching—in the meantime write the column on your blog. Ask your favorite coffee shop if you can invite some friends and read some of your favorite posts. Start your own blog community or online magazine with your blog peers. Don’t wait for a hand-engraved wrestling speedo–Make your own opportunities.

    Take off la mascara (mask) once in a while. In 2008 I deemed annsrants a humor blog. Today I’m Mexican wrestling about creativity. If I only write funny here for every single post, invariably I grow uneven and begin despising this space. And believe me, when I’m uneven it really screws up my flying Centon. So occasionally I shimmy out of the humor mask, I wear la cabellera (just my hair) instead of the mask. If you write a fashion blog I hope you do a sweat suit giveaway on occasion. If you write a cooking blog, I hope you also photograph Taco Bell night. If you write a happiness blog, I hope you have a toll free number and a safety plan. Take off the mask, we want to see your face.

    Own it. I had to go into therapy for this one. Why can’t I just blog for fun like a normal person? I asked shortly after I began blogging. Why do I have to take everything national? I felt embarrassed—ashamed—at feeling so goal-driven, and at needing and wanting to accomplish so much.  I struggled with my unexpressed potential, and I didn’t know what to do with it. I just knew that for me blogging didn’t fit the “for fun” or “hobby” check boxes. My therapist said, that’s because for you this is professional—you’re building a career. Sure, my inner-critic said “HA Career, HA if you’re talented enough, HA if you ever make any money,” but my therapist’s explanation made sense, and my soul nodded yup. I started owning my creative ambition and found other people proudly wearing theirs’ as sequined capes. We started saying our dreams out loud and stuff started happening. Then I started a show and…well, took it national.

    One move at a time. Yes you too can perfect both the rana (frog) and the jaula (cage), but one at a time. Pick one or two dreams or goals and devote yourself—announce them out loud with your voice, and to your trusted people. You have to own it to make it happen, and you can’t achieve everything all at once. And then…

    Become El Rudo (a brute). Say no, relentlessly. The moment you own your dream and name it, the universe will test you with that Sew Perfect you wanted for Hanukkah in 1980: Want to write for our awesome site you would have killed to write for up until this exact moment? Here’s a job opening for a position you wanted 6 months ago! Mexican wrestling is fun, but your BFF wants you to run a marathon! It will happen and it will test your resolve, and nothing feels more satisfying than prioritizing yourself and your batalla (battle) over everything for the first time.

    Establish the rules. Define your goal and how you get there. Create benchmarks so you can measure your progress. I don’t recommend elusive goals like become popular or get discovered by an agent and land a book deal because they make passive waiting/hoping goals. Make them active by defining what popularity means—a certain number of followers? An impressive bio?—and outlining your steps to get there (giveway, guest posts? facebook ad?). See also: do your work, write the book.

    Your blog and social media are sus amigos, not El Jefe (the boss). For 99% of us, the blog will never bring fame nor especially not fortune. As soon as you view your blog and online presence as a friend or tool toward a greater goal rather than the goal itself, you can stop obsessing over how many people read and follow you, how many comments you get, who retweets you and who doesn’t. Put all that wasted energy back toward your goal, your path—la lucha! Make a list of why you keep blogging/your presence online and revisit it when you tire of la batalla (battle.)

    Find your Capitan. Find a mentor, a writing group, your trusted people—Parejas Increibles Incredible pairings, heels teaming up with faces! Surround yourself with other professionals who challenge you to grow, while supporting you along your journey. Sometimes these people emerge after you make your goal public. Other times they happen because you pay them for their consultation. Yes, you deserve it.

    Rest and wash your uniform. Read books on real paper, exercise that chair butt beyond the swivel. Make room in your head. Actively seek inspiration (artistic, spiritual, edible—whatever works for you).

    Breathe. Practice patience–my hardest work. Trust that your journey is unfolding as it should—that you have exactly the information you need and only the info you need when you need it. If you don’t know what your goal is, keep doing the work and trust the answer to reveal itself. I keep Melody Beattie and Pema Chodron books by my bedside, and loving people surrounding me. I seek out mentorship professionally and privately. Sometimes I meditate. Patience makes the true lucha libre for me—the free fight—because when I stop fighting against patience I feel free. But I also need to keep fighting for my creativity to feel free.

    Some people are born into extended wrestling families. Some people are born to contribute creativity. Own it, use it, and–whatever you do–don’t skimp on your mask designer.

    Luchador

    photo

    ***

    If you’re going to BlogHer this week, please join Listen To Your Mother at our Open Mic Salon on Friday night from 8-10 pm.

    Also, I’m leading a small-group workshop at 11:00 am on Saturday for the Writing Lab called “Copyediting Clinic: How to Tighten Your Prose” Flabby prose obscures your meaning and dulls your impact. Tightened prose: BAM! Bring questions and, if you like, your own prose for tightening.While the pre-reserved slots are filled, they do save a few spots you can sign-up for day of.

    See you in NEW YORK CITY!

    0 thoughts on “Own your creativity. Or at least, flying-cross-body-press it.”

    1. Ahhhh, BlogHer sounds like it would be so much fun!

      This is all very good advice… becoming El Rudo and breathing are probably my biggest challenges.

    2. Those who chalk everything up to luck don’t know that the “lucky” make their own opportunities and work damn hard at it.

    3. Well, in addition to now feeling a need to watch Nacho Libre, I also have a strong desire to hire you as my life coach!

      Happy BlogHer countdown to you!

    4. Oh, YOU, with the such good WRITING, seriously. I’m so glad I get to read what you write. I’m afraid I’m going to write too much in response, but oh well.

      1. I have had a pounding headache since yesterday morning. This post actually made me CRY, starting around the la mascara part, and I think my head is going to feel better now, so thanks. That was some serious pressure buildup in there.

      2. “Your blog and social media are sus amigos, not El Jefe (the boss). For 99% of us, the blog will never bring fame nor especially not fortune.” — This has been one of the basic points of my approach to this since I started, not at all on purpose at first, and now, it’s part of my admittedly-sketchy sanity plan. Keeping that kind of weight off of my own writing space has kept it mine

      3. This is the best post I have read in a very long time, and I am going to bookmark it and read it to myself whenever I need it. I’m also going to share it with my BlogHerAtHome people, because, well, they don’t have to go anywhere to put this stuff into action, even New York. Thank you. I’m so glad you’re my people.

    5. okay. how did i happen to get so damn lucky to find you in a hallway and connect with you my friend? you are so damn smart and wow – this is one awesome piece that speaks to this chick’s creative soul. i wish, wish, wish i was flying to nyc to hang out with you this week. holy shit. damn. soon i hope. soon.

      but really dude – this piece is epic. i might even have to print it and tuck into my bedside table drawer. 🙂 (and speaking of, who are those people you have on YOUR bedside table? i have no clue. tell me next time.)

      lots of love sister –

      lee

    6. I think the reason you grapple with issues is because you’re a writer, not a blogger. Bloggers just throw anything up on the screen, writers re-write and re-write until they can (try and) let it go. Writers are competitive and that’s nothing to be ashamed of.

    7. Oh Ann. I will read this again and again. (One of the times I will have a wrestling dictionary by my side -love that language!!!! and need to use it more often in my everyday-speak.) Keep on body-slamming and doing good in every way you do. Expect an obnoxiously big hug at BlogHer. Thank you for being an inspiration!

    8. Fantástico! Que inteligente eres tú! I will take your words to heart, love them up and then share them with my friends. But first, I have a craving from some chips and salsa. See you soon!!

    9. This is perfect and you are a prize.
      I’ve seen similar things written, but they were nowhere near as great, as engaging, and as thorough.

      You make me want to cheer for you all the time, in case I’ve not made that clear in the past.

    10. In college I used to make extra money by sparring with some of those wrestlers. It was a lot of fun and back then I could wear the hell out of anything spandex, unless my girlfriend came to watch in which case nature would sometimes take over.

      And let me tell you the other wrestlers are merciless about that kind of thing. They don’t just tease you, they abuse you.

      Fortunately I was big enough to dish out some Judah Maccabee justice and the teasing didn’t last, but I am still scarred by comments about my mohel having been too aggresive.

    11. This post is so good it makes me want to start swearing.

      How crazy am I and please don’t answer.

      Hot damn and sonofabitch mother…

      I am printing this up b/c to have ONE KICK ASS FRIEND IN LIFE like Ann Imig is a blessing unto that person.

      I am one lucky sonofafrackin b., aren’t I?

      This was amazing.

      Amazing and if I were a country, my national anthem.

      GO FIGHT WIN.

      GO fight win, b/c NO ONE is going to do it for you.

      LOVED IT.

      And stealing your content right now, to laminate and stick to my stomach, under my clothes, where I can see it anytime I find myself looking down thinking ” I got nothin.” oh….yesssss you do. Looky right thar…”

    12. Oh, I love this post. I needed to read it. It spoke to my heart… my only problem now, is that I need to figure out what my goal is.

    13. I am favoriting this, printing it & posting it on the wall next to my desk to look to for inspiration.This post spoke to my heart.How have you been reading my mind? �� I am trying to learn to own it.I feel like my dreams have been so outlandish that I’ve been too afraid to say them out loud, like I don’t deserve them & the world will tell me so . I’ve been working hard .I think it’s time I let people see my inner luchadore. And now I’m telling my dad to bring me a new luchadore mask when he returns from Mexico this trip, I’m pinning that sucker to my wall too for constant inspiration & the occasional giggle. I won’t be at BlogHer but I wish I was. Thanks for this post.

    14. This was brilliant and should be required before anyone can sign up with WordPress or Blogger.

      Love you lady and your wise self.

    15. I’m sending this to everyone I know and then also to people I don’t know, just because I feel everyone should read it…I’m awesome that way. I can’t make BlogHer’12, but next year I’m throwing myself into El cuadrilátero and Rana my fears! Thanks for the great post! And thank you http://lucharan.tripod.com/diction.htm for the Lucha Libre help!

    16. Oh you are so wise. Yes yes yes!

      I have a terrible complex of waiting for things to happen to me instead of making them happen. Its one of my greatest faults. I dream really big, but I keep waiting and dreaming more and not acting on them.

    17. I adore this post SO MUCH, and it’s totally what I needed right now. And you put a hilarious spin on it. I need to remember to focus on MY writing and MY blog and not everyone else’s. Have fun at BlogHer!

    18. So much good advice, not for just creativity, but for LIFE. I’m so glad I read this, because it gave me the needed kick in the @$$ I needed today. I always believe that if you tell yourself you CAN’T do something, you’ll be right. You gave me a lot of food for thought today.

      THANK YOU!!

    19. I’m finally getting to read this post, and it makes my heart and mind soar. So full of wisdom, grounding and simple and yet so hard to remember to do. I love how your light shines so bright and your feet are so firmly planted on the ground. I know how hard you work on both, and you are a total inspiration to me.

      I’m going to print this out and tape it to my bulletin board; it’s so full of awesome.

      -xo

      -Ellie

    20. Can I please say how freaking AWESOME this post is? Can I also say how SAD I am that I didn’t get to meet you in NYC? I was only at BlogHer for one day and had to go back home. You FREAKING ROCK.

      I so want to participate in LTYM one of these days. Believe that!

    21. Such an amazing post. I want to print it and laminate it and stick it on my fridge. My kids would totally appreciate the wrestler pics too.
      This post makes me that much more disappointed we didn’t meet at Blogher. You are such an inspiration, a creative force in this blogosphere. Thank you.

    22. I love that you put this all down on euphemistic paper. You nailed all the hurdles & roadblocks beautifully. (Every so often I roll our conversation around in my head wondering what it is I want on that pesky blog. Still coming up empty but at least I know which hurdle I’m facing.)

    23. Thank you for reading this at BlogHer. You totally inspired me to keep doing what I love, even if I feel slightly mad to do so.

      Fantastic job! You have a new fan.