The Fire in the Hands
Reclaiming Your Creative Soul in a World of Consumption
カートのアイテムが多すぎます
カートに追加できませんでした。
ウィッシュリストに追加できませんでした。
ほしい物リストの削除に失敗しました。
ポッドキャストのフォローに失敗しました
ポッドキャストのフォロー解除に失敗しました
聴き放題対象外タイトルです。Audibleプレミアムプラン登録で、非会員価格の30%OFFで購入できます。
¥900 で購入
-
ナレーター:
-
B Fike
-
著者:
-
Sean Williams
このコンテンツについて
You feel it, don’t you? That ache in your chest when you scroll past someone else’s art, someone else’s garden, someone else’s life. A quiet voice that says, “I could do that... if only.” Then the louder voice shuts it down: Too late. Too busy. Not gifted. Not special. Bullshit. Creativity is not a lottery ticket. It’s not reserved for the “chosen few” who were born holding a paintbrush or a guitar. Creativity is a blue-collar practice, and the world has spent the last two decades training you out of it.
We are the most entertained, most photographed, most over-stimulated generation in history, and we are starving for the one thing no algorithm can sell us: the feeling of making something with our own hands. In The Fire in the Hands, Sean Williams gives you the no-nonsense playbook to steal your creative soul back from the consumption machine. This is not another “find your passion” pep talk. This is a street-level guide for anyone who has ever felt the itch to build, write, plant, draw, cook, code, or shape something that didn’t exist yesterday.
You’ll learn how to:
- Destroy the toxic myth that you need “talent” or permission
- Wake up from the endless scroll and reclaim the boredom that births ideas
- Make gloriously bad art on purpose (and why that’s the only way to get good)
- Outsmart Resistance the invisible force that talks you out of starting
- Build rituals that make inspiration irrelevant
- Steal your attention back from the trillion-dollar heist happening in your pocket
- Turn failure into raw material and criticism into rocket fuel
- Find your voice by accidentally failing to imitate your heroes
- Ship your work without vomiting from the vulnerability hangover
- Leave a fingerprint that outlives you whether ten people see it or ten million