merging  with    a   greater     source.     This    conscious   contact
frequently   affords     us  the     perspectives    needed  to  solve
vexing  personal    or  creative    conundrums.
It   is  a   paradox     of  creative    recovery    that    we  must    get
serious  about   taking  ourselves   lightly.    We  must    work    at
learning    to  play.   Creativity  must    be  freed   from    the narrow
parameters  of  capital A   art and recognized  as  having  much
broader play    (that   word    again).
As   we  work    with    our     morning     pages   and     artist  dates,
many    forgotten   samplings   of  our own creativity  may come
to  mind.
•   I   had forgotten   all about   those   paintings   I   did in  high
school. I   loved   painting    those   flats   in  drama   tech!
•    I   suddenly    remembered  I   played  Antigone—who
could   forget  her?    I   don’t   know    if  I   was any good,   but
I   remember    I   loved   it.
•   I’d forgotten   all about   the skits   I   wrote   when    I   was
ten.    I   set them    all to  Ravel’s Bolero  no  matter  what
they     were    about.  I   made    my  brothers    and     sisters
swoon   about   the living  room.
•   I   used    to  tap-dance.  I   know    you can’t   believe it  now,
but I   was something!
As   we  write,  digging     ourselves   out     of  denial,     our
memories,    dreams,     and     creative    plans   all     move    to  the
surface.    We  discover    anew    that    we  are creative    beings. The
impulse  cooks   in  us  all,    simmering   along   all     the     time—
without our knowledge,  without our encouragement,  even
without our approval.   It  moves   beneath the surface of  our
