Growing up playing sports I always trained myself to be competitive.
There are only so many spots available on the field so you need to be better than everyone standing next to you.
To me this doesn’t exist in photography and that is what I find so freeing about being in this field.
Yet there are some people who think they’re still on the basketball court so they compete with their counterparts and they keep secrets and they don’t collaborate.
Comparing yourself to others is a lonely way to grow in the creative process.
I’ve also found that this tactic doesn’t work.
Before I get to what does work I’m going to explain to another mistake I’m still trying to overcome.
When you’re competing against yourself it’s important to not fall into the trap of only seeing problems.
Eg. Say you’re running a race and you come in second every time and your biggest issue are the straight aways but you’re killing everyone else on the hills.
It’s important to keep your focus on what you are doing well at and doubling down on those skills.
Beating yourself up over what you aren’t doing well at is terrible for your mental health.
The central theme of my journaling this week has been all about what was I doing when things were going well in my life v.s. what was I doing when things weren’t going so well.
The most reoccurring answer for when times were going bad was beating myself up over meaningless things.
When things were going well I had a routine, I held myself to small tasks daily, I created work often, and I put myself out to the world.
Back to the point of competition.
One of my clients is a tattoo artist (Eva) in Brooklyn and she’s one of the most talented giving and inspirational people I’ve ever met.
She is from Turkey so there is a bit of a language barrier but what she may not say in words in always evident in her actions.
With all the amazing tattoo artists in the city you’d think why would you join such a competitive market?
That’s not the way she looks at NYC for tattooing she looks at it as the place with the biggest tattoo community and most amount of clients in the world.
Through Eva’s actions I have seen how she has built a community around her new shop in Brooklyn, Ny.
She hired local artists to build the furniture, she hired her friends who’s work is very similar to work there.
If Eva was competitive in her tattooing I don’t think she would have the shop, or the community that she has in Brooklyn.
Competition has an important place in the world but for myself and for so many other artists you will go further with a tribe than you will alone.