Facing Fears and Creative Challenges with Courage and Curiosity as an Independent Musician

Independent Musician Carla Stella

This is a guest blog post from the wonderful Carla Finsterbusch aka Carla Stella.

A Child’s Silent Dreams

I remember watching in awe whenever people played music on the streets. I remember pretending to be a pop star on some imaginary stage. I remember watching ‘Mama Mia’ for the first time and secretly wishing I was Donna. Music, Art, and Creativity have always fascinated me. Yet, the 10-year-old me had always assumed performing music was only meant for some really lucky and gifted people. Back then, I was way too shy to express my passion for music. It never got into my head that I could be making music too. Luckily, this assumption has changed. I started challenging my old beliefs. I realized, I needed to get out of my comfort zone to live my dreams. 

Beginning My Creative Journey With Small Steps

At the age of about 11, I founded a girl band with two classmates. We totally dedicated ourselves to Christmas songs, and I definitely thought we were going to make it as the next big hit! However, we played gigs in our heads only…

Manifesting Dreams and Releasing My Debut EP

When I got my first own keyboard about 10 years ago, I never thought about writing my own songs. Today, I’m 22, and last year I have self-released my debut EP ‘Marionette Show’. 

Meeting other musicians when I moved to study in the Netherlands three years ago, I realized I wanted to focus more on music. Understanding that if others can learn how to produce and release songs, I should be able to do so too, redirected my entire mindset towards growth. 

Autodidact Learning and Gaining Confidence

Over the past one and a half years, I learned everything I know about music production by joining multiple courses and workshops. I got to connect with many like-minded people who have been supporting me on my journey. In a male dominated industry, meeting other strong women who learned music production was especially empowering and important for my confidence. 

I moved at a fast pace and within half a year, I self-produced my debut EP. Looking back, I’m laughing at the silly mistakes I did back then. I didn’t even know how to set the metronome when recording my first songs. There was no one who told me where to start and what to do next. Learning everything by myself was really overwhelming at times. At the same time, I learned to divide my energy, make decisions, and take on responsibility for myself. 

Most importantly, I wanted to have fun and enjoy the process of creating. I wanted to enjoy the magic of developing something unique and expressing myself creatively. I wasn’t afraid of failing, and I accepted what is already there as enough! Exactly this mindset motivated me to finish my EP. 

Overcoming Comparison and Perfectionism 

Despite the joy of creating, it’s easy to fall into a downward spiral, especially when comparing yourself to others. It’s easy to become overwhelmed or get stuck in perfectionism. That’s what happened to me over the past months. I even started doubting whether I should pursue making music at all. Constantly doubting whether my music and I as a person are enough held me back from finishing my projects. This toxic mindset held me back from doing what actually matters most to me. I realized, I sometimes have to learn to limit myself in the creation stage in order to actually finish my projects and not become too perfectionist. Acknowledging that what is there is enough protects me from constantly being drained and frustrated because I think I should do more.

Prioritizing in Self-Directed Learning

Self-producing and self-releasing music are very self-directed activities. It can sometimes feel quite isolated, especially when no one around you seems to do something similar. Besides the actual music production, I wanted to learn additional skills such as basic marketing and PR. I learned how to write my own press releases, submit my songs to several blogs, magazines and radios. I also had to deal with the fact that all this effort did not pay off the way I expected it to. 

I wanted to learn too many things at the same time, which hardly left me satisfied with the results. Constantly pushing forward without taking breaks was really exhausting and lead to an inner restlessness. Learning the importance of setting priorities, helped me do everything with more ease. Being proud of what I have already accomplished and setting specific goals for the future is a crucial source of motivation and inspiration. 

Balancing Multiple Passions

Balancing two passions, psychology and music, has been an additional challenge. Finding enough time for both, and making sure to not overwork myself, hasn’t been easy. Sometimes, I would sometimes totally immerse myself in university tasks because I felt overwhelmed by all the creative ideas I had for my music. Interestingly, when I was really stressed with studying, I often felt even more inspired to write new songs. 

This has shown to me that on one side, multiple passions can challenge, but on the other side, they can also enrich each other creatively!

The Impact of Environment Change on Self-Development

Living in Berlin over the summer has shown to me what impact an environment change can have on who you are and want to become as a person. I barely knew anyone in the city, and the new environment has challenged me to get out there, meet new people and get out of my comfort zone. I got inspired by people who are at a stage in life where I would like to see myself. I realized the power of a community that believes in you and lifts you up. At the same time, I realized the power of believing in myself and talking to myself in a kinder way that nourishes my creative energies. 

Self-Acceptance and Adapting a Growth Mindset

‘What makes you think you are different from the people that have achieved what you want?’ This question has really made an impact on the way I think about my goals. While others might be already a lot further in the process, I do indeed have everything it takes to get there. The people we tend to compare with have also started small, only to grow with every new step they take. Shifting the focus on what is already there and what I have already accomplished makes future goals look less intimidating. 

Changing my mindset from thinking I am not enough to committing to accepting myself, and acting upon my values has given me so much energy that now I feel like nothing can hold me back anymore. I’m getting more into a flow! 

I know there will always be ups and downs. I know there are going to be points in the future when I am going to feel discouraged again. This is normal. I am not going to let this stop me from what I am doing, I can always refer back to why it is meaningful and important what I am doing. Adapting the right mindset and directing it towards growth can change an entire life. 

Facing Fears and Insecurities

One fear I had for a long time was performing in front of others. Looking at where my courage and curiosity have brought me already in the past was very uplifting and motivates me to use my courage as my strength to face my fears. Adapting the mindset “what doesn’t kill you, makes you stronger” has helped me deal with my insecurities. In fact, the times when I did something that scared me anyway, were usually the times when I experienced what is also called the “highest self”. I realized that my fears were mostly unfounded. I was afraid of failing. But I wasn’t aware that failing is in fact very normal and part of the process. 

I was afraid of rejection. But became aware of the fact that I will never be able to control how others react to me and how others like what I am doing. I realized, I can only control how I treat myself – Am I rejecting myself? Or am I allowing myself to be just myself?

There will be new challenges along the way, but knowing my values and strengths will help me find the courage and power I need to follow my dreams. 

First Time Busking and Facing Fear of Performance

When moving to Berlin over the summer, one of my goals was to go busking there. As someone who has barely performed in front of others and never went busking before, this idea really scared me. Being scared didn’t hold me back from doing it anyway!

On a hot Sunday in the beginning of August, I decided I’ve practiced enough. I felt ready to show my songs to this colorful and buzzing city. I got excited to see people’s reactions to my songs. The will to take on this challenge grew much bigger than the fear that held be back before. Loaded with my e-guitar, amp, and mic, I went to Mauerpark to find a good spot. I was aware that if I decided to leave again, no one will know. But I did not want to disappoint myself. I remembered how my courage has helped me grow in past situations. And what’s the worst that can happen anyway?!

In fact, what really happened was that I had a lot of fun and people seemed to like my music too. Once I started playing and singing, it seemed like all my fears got washed away and there was only joy left. Some people told me they felt inspired by my courage. As connecting with people through my music and empowering others to live their dreams is one of my main reasons to make music, this feedback confirmed to me that I was going the right way. 

Busking in Berlin

Busking in Berlin

Values and Goals Awareness

I am writing this while I am doing my internship at The Great Creative Life in Berlin. I truly believe that there is talent in everyone. During my internship, I learned that after important steps like clarifying goals, identifying and removing obstacles, coaching includes creating a strategy and making action plans. 

A coaching session would usually start with asking a client about specific goals they want to work on. An important lesson I learned during the internship is about the importance of knowing your values. Reflecting on my own values now constantly helps me prioritize tasks. It helps me make more goal-directed decisions, and focus on creative expression and building connections to other people.

Slowly, I realized, I do actually have an idea of what I want my future to look like. I realized, I wanted to grow a bigger network and meet more like-minded people to create a feeling of togetherness and community, and not get stuck with a feeling of despair and overpowering. I realized, I actually do want to go out and perform my music in front of other people and connect with them. I realized, my creativity DOES indeed matter! I realized, my dreams are indeed realistic.

Positive Feedback Loops 

Oftentimes, facing one fear and growing out of it sets an entire positive upward spiral into motion. The strength and courage that are build from those experiences can transfer to other situations, having an empowering effect. For example, I felt motivated to go to several open mic sessions in Berlin, performing my own songs, which allowed me to expand my audience and build valuable connections with like-minded people. 

Being scared but doing something despite this fear and gaining positive experiences while doing so has an incredible effect on both, self-esteem and confidence. The more often you jump over your own shadow, the easier it becomes. Driven by initiative and courage, this positive feedback loop will automatically guide you into the right direction!

Key Takeaways

  • Your creativity matters!
  • Challenge old beliefs and get out of your comfort zone.
  • Knowing your values will help you prioritize tasks and direct them toward your goals.
  • Learn to be responsible for yourself and your goals.
  • Accept that you are enough! Be proud of what you have already accomplished and set specific goals for the future. 
  • Understand that failing is normal.
  • Adapting a growth mindset helps to deal with ups and downs.
  • Use your strengths to face your fears.
  • Let your will to take on a new challenge grow bigger than the fear that is holding you back.
  • Believe in yourself and talk to yourself in a kind way that nourishes your creative energies.
  • You cannot control other’s reactions toward you; You can only control how you treat yourself.
  • Limiting yourself creatively and focusing on one thing at a time can help against procrastination and not finishing projects. 
  • Multiple passions can enrich and profit from each other.
  • Changing environments can be a new source of inspiration and an opportunity to reinvent and surround yourself with inspiring and supportive people.
  • Stop toxic upward-comparison, accept what is already there, and be proud of your accomplishments.
  • Face your fears and set the positive feedback loop into motion.

Biography

Carla Finsterbusch aka Carla Stella is a musician and freshly graduated psychology student about to embark on a Masters in Creative Talent Development. Blending ethereal melodies and uplifting dance beats with a sensitivity for poetic lyrics, her music reflects her passion for experimental electronic indie pop and the human mind. She writes, produces, and performs her music, using her voice creatively to address the broad spectrum of emotions that we are able to feel as human beings. Aiming to create a space where everyone can feel heard and respected, she addresses topics such as (gender) equality, sustainability, and mental health. Merging her enthusiasm for music and talent development, she specializes in coaching and developing creative talents. 

You can connect with Carla and listen to her music at the following places: Carla Stella - Marionette Show

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Creative Life Design: 10 key areas to consider

It can be helpful to think of our lives as artworks. Life then becomes less about perfection or striving towards an ‘ideal’ and more about accepting, engaging with what’s present and being curious about what is possible. We are co-creating our individual lives with life itself. We can find the poetry and beauty in all moments when we take the approach of life as artwork.

Here is a list of ten key areas with some ideas for consideration when you are designing your artful, creative life.

You may like to use this list as a way to think about what areas of your life you might like to cultivate more artfully.

1.  A Creative Mind 

The foundation of a great creative life starts with the wellbeing of the individual and the first condition is to cultivate a healthy mind/body in which creativity can be fostered, encouraged and harnessed.

  1. Cultivate a mind free from the suffering that anxiety, self-doubt, inner conflict and other fears or negative emotional states cause. This is an ongoing journey and ‘free from suffering’ is an aspirational direction that helps us develop equanimity and resilience.
  2. Develop the ability to focus, develop decision making skills, the ability to be calm, reflective and energised by ideas.
  3. Foster imagination, resourcefulness, curiosity and inspired inner states of being so you can flourish and live life fully alive
  4. Cultivate an artistic sensibility: increase your appreciation of beauty, enhance your senses, open up a sense of wonder, develop an awareness of the sublime, perceive the poetic nature of life, engage in humour and absurdity.
  5. Develop the ability to access creative/alternative states of consciousness at will.
  6. If you regularly experience painful thoughts or memories, low moods or anxiety, seek therapy. It could be one of the best things you do for yourself.
  7. Start to see possibilities all around you: see how things can be done rather than how things can’t be done.
  8. For the already hyper-creative mind: harness your creativity by cultivating healthy discipline and conscientiousness so you can finish the things that you start.

2.   A Creative Heart 

  1. Connect to the power and wisdom of the heart, the internal compass pointing you towards your highest good.
  2. Connect to internal personal values and orient your life around those values.
  3. Free yourself from inherited values where they no longer serve you.
  4. Cultivate bravery, vulnerability, empathy and compassion for self and others.
  5. Heal the creative wounds from your past.
  6. Cultivate strength: the ability to be steadfast, strong and dignified in the face of challenges.
  7. Explore questions of meaning, existence and develop a personal spiritual* practice or non-practice.

*This may include reclaiming words that have been polluted by industries and dogmatic belief systems or finding other words to encapsulate your personal existential stance.

3. A Creative Body

  1. Draw on the wisdom of the body. It has a lot to tell you.
  2. Live sensuously, it is essential for deepening your creative work, is helpful for healing and for living a fully engaged life.
  3. Look after your body through making informed choices for food, exercise, rest. Consider the body as a soft living animal to be cared for and loved.
  4. Have fun with and enjoy your body rather than try to shape it to an ‘ideal’ because you feel like you ‘should’ look a certain way.
  5. Learn to work with and bring love to the limitations of the body, particularly as it ages or where chronic illness is present.
  6. Understand your biology, brain, hormones and energy and how they effect everything you do.
  7. Explore the link between creativity and sexual energy, it’s something to pay attention to and play with.

4. Creative Process

The making of the art. Your art. In whatever form that may be.

  1. Find your flow, your own way of acting and being in the world that fits your personal rhythms so that you can be prolific, effective and maintain a sense of wellbeing, accomplishment and calm.
  2. Make self-expression a part of everyday life.
  3. Factor in your body, your vitality, cycles, emotions and energy.
  4. Make time for skills development, the ‘how’ of making your art (whatever ‘art’ means to you)
  5. Developing your creative process may require shifting from the default mode (how I’ve always done it or how I’ve always been told to do it) to something that serves you better. It may mean shifting to a more enlivened and vivacious way of creating (if you struggle to start) OR a more structured way of doing it (if you struggle to finish).

5. Creative Relationships

Connections with others are at the core of living a creative life. Creative and skilful communication leads to creative, open-hearted relationships.

  1. Decide on the kinds of relationships you would like in your life: romantic partnership/s, friendships, relationships with family and children, inspiring work colleagues, partners and collaborators.
  2. Foster skilful and art-full ways of communicating with others that lead to the co-creation of dynamic, heart-centred relationships with healthy boundaries.
  3. Learn the communication skills that increase understanding between individuals, family members and groups.
  4. Learn skills on how to generate innovative ideas and problem solve in group settings. Groups of humans creating together can have powerful results.
  5. Develop the use of metaphor, poetry, gesture and art-making as a way to communicate more deeply and effectively.

6. Creative Work

  1. Cultivate your Right Livelihood – find or create the work that is congruent with your values, strengths and heart’s calling.
  2. That said, don’t feel obligated to buy into the current trend that markets the idea that  “quitting your day job and starting your own business” is the pinnacle of success that everyone should aspire to. It’s not the only path. A day job can provide a lot of freedom.
  3. If you want to be self-employed, or want to sell your art/services on the side, get help in developing an economically sustainable business model and learn the business strategies that will enable you to create your best work and get paid for it. I offer a business coaching program just for this.
  4. Explore the psychology of money and break the cycle of financial stress that many people often get trapped in.
  5. Learn new money mindsets and money boundaries that help you have a healthy relationship with money.

7. Creative Community 

  1. Engage in and foster community. This can be both locally and globally, in-person and online.
  2. Consider what it means to be a good citizen, take sensible steps towards living a responsible and ethical life (if you don’t feel satisfied with where you are already). Perhaps join pre-existing communities that will help you do this.
  3. Overcome the fears that prevent people participating in community: eg. fear of making mistakes in public, fear of rejection, fear that what you have to offer won’t be valued, fear of overwhelm, fear of not knowing what to say, fear that you will be disliked or that you will dislike others, apathy.
  4. Say ‘hi’ to your neighbours.

8. Creative Change 

We are global citizens and, if you are reading this, you are privileged enough to have the power to affect change. What would you like to contribute?

  1. Use the skills of creativity to expand possibilities for individuals, communities and the environment.
  2. Creativity can be used as a tool for social action.
  3. Use art for making change.
  4. Cultivate your strengths, advocacy skills and knowledge so that you can act as a force for positive change.
  5. Consider social practice as an art medium you might like to try.
  6. Practice secret acts of kindness.

9. Creative Play 

  1. Spend time in purposeless creation and enjoy life in the present moment.
  2. Cultivate the ability to let go, play and just have fun!
  3. Regularly make time to step into ‘timeless time’.
  4. Spend time in nature, appreciate the earth, stare into space.
  5. Make art for art’s sake, for the joy of it.
  6. Dance, now. Even if it’s just your eyebrows. I dare you.
  7. Be naughty sometimes.
  8. Have a giggle.

10. Creative Living 

Putting it all together. Ultimately, in living the great creative life, we are exploring the ways we can live meaningful, connected, engaged and fulfilling lives while maintaining our personal wellbeing and zest for life.

  1. Find the balance between simplicity and complexity. How can you dance between these different life domains?
  2. Start simply, but do start. If you start simply everyday soon your life will be something more wonderful than you ever imagined.
  3. Pick one domain you would like to develop further and set yourself three tasks in order to develop it. Repeat this process.
  4. If your life is an artwork that you are collaborating in creating, how would you like to shape it?

The goal of The Great Creative life is: Life lived fully alive.

Your opinions on these life domains are valuable to me and others reading this, I would be glad to let this evolve through your feedback.

What ideas would you add or subtract to any of these domains?

Would you add any other domains?

Please comment below.