Why Holding onto Failed Artwork May be Holding You Back

How letting go can fuel your artistic creativity

Christopher P Jones
4 min readMar 14, 2023

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Photo by Brett Jordan on Unsplash

One way you can think about creativity is that it’s not about what you make, but what you choose to get rid of that matters.

For writers, it’s the words, sentences and paragraphs that might be clogging up the flow of a larger piece that sometimes ought to be trimmed. Occasionally, entire manuscripts have to be completely disowned before new ideas can truly and succinctly show through.

The wise advice is to “kill your darlings.” The meaning of this rather cut-throat guidance is for creatives to ruthlessly eliminate any unnecessary storylines, characters or sentences, no matter how precious they might be to their maker. After all, who isn’t sometimes prone to admiring their work a little too strongly — too personally — such that pulling the plug on hours of toil can be a wrench? But it is often crucial for the sake of purifying the writing to deliver a stronger punch in the end.

Sometimes we need help getting rid of the non-essential. I think of the tale of Raymond Carver, the American short story writer whose poignant tales work so brilliantly because of their minimalism, conciseness, spare beginnings and wide-open endings. According to reports, much of this leanness was down to Carver’s…

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