We have read it and heard it repeated everywhere we look and listen.
Change is — has been — will impact all facets of life. The current global change that has claimed 2020 has challenged the ‘do I dare?’ mindset of the creative. The muse is a sensitive soul. She feels the angst as deeply as the joy — inspiration is derived and mined from this seat — gold mined!
Health crisis, economic crisis, the uncertainty of life, the fear of not so much the outdoors but whether we can trust that everybody is doing the right thing.
For how long must we entertain fear as it enslaves us by forfeiting joy?
The creative forges on to leave the carbon footprint of these challenging times.
Dare and dare again and the muse shall heed the call.
The creative day, if allowed to slide, is a difficult one to recover but is possible with the determination of, ‘I will dare.’
TS Eliot’s poem, The Lovesong of J Alfred Prufrock. conveys the uncertainty of modern times where ‘normal’ becomes unusual. Images of desolation pervade his poem:
Like a patient etherized upon a table/Let us go, through certain half-deserted streets,/The muttering retreats
This echoes the current emotional and scientific uncertainty we face.
Eliot’s raw emotions capture the universal angst of his time where rapid economic and technological advancement changed his perceptions of life. And the yellow fog of uncertainty seeps into 2020 rising, falling …
The natural outcome is to be perplexed but navigation to the new normal through introspection is vital.
The pen is the mighty memory of our time, of all times, and writing must go on as must art and music and all creative pursuits.
In the making as creatives, writers, artists, we share a universal experience in that it is normal to be afraid, and it is brave to dare by creating new worlds that either mirror the present or transport us to worlds we dream of. In dreaming we bring those hopeful worlds into the conscious mind of the reader/audience who in turn subconsciously works towards making that dreamed, hopeful world, a new reality.
The writer’s pen will never dry or fade — words speak into the future from the past bringing meaning and understanding that this too shall pass.
The human condition is live with the possibility for new stories to be told, poems to be written, songs to be sung and paintings to be created to articulate and quell all fear.
Do I dare, and do I dare, — oh yes, we must, to make this life the best life we have had the courage to dream into our reality!
Today step forward — leave the fences and backyards of your mind and speak of your fears, insecurity, and uncertainty through artistic expression.
Take a chance. Live your passion.
This is a time for you to be YOU in all that you do without the fear of judgement.
Happy writing. Happy creating. Happy daring to channel your way forward for a life free of angst with the promise of joy.
What’s your creative plan?











Retired South African nurse, residing in Australia, Queenie Naidoo, in her eighties today, is passionate about healing as she ever was. She served the poor and destitute, the ill and dying with devotion. She was fondly known to many as, ‘Sister Queenie.’ She garnered the support of local doctors in the town of Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, to donate medication which she dispensed at the free medical community clinic she steadfastly ran, for many years, on Sunday mornings, to serve those who were unable to access medical treatment. Her home was a haven to the ill, depressed, and ailing hearts. Her sense of humour and maternal warmth drew many to her. Her lifetime commitment to healing and supporting the physical and mental health of her patients resonates today with the selfless and potentially dangerous work of health care professionals during this global pandemic we currently face. Added to Queenie Naidoo’s inspirational credit is her creative talent in having produced a theatrical performance, God the Last Refuge, staged at the King Street Theatre in Newtown, Sydney, in 2014. Queenie has inspired me from the cradle as my loving, caring, mother and continues to do so to this day.





























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