Creative blocks don’t arrive with fanfare. They slip in quietly — usually on a day when you’re already tired, already stretched, already carrying more than you meant to. One moment you’re flowing, the next you’re staring at your materials like they belong to someone else.
But here’s the truth most creatives forget: A creative block isn’t a personal flaw. It’s a physiological, emotional, and environmental response. And because of that, it can be shifted — gently, intentionally, and without forcing yourself into burnout. Below is a deeper, more actionable guide you can take notes from. These are the practices that help you reconnect with your craft, your hands, and your sense of self when the muse goes quiet. They never fail me when I need to get my vibe back and I want to share them with you as well.

Shrink the Task Until It’s Impossible Not to Start
When your brain feels overwhelmed, it shuts down to protect you. The antidote is micro‑motion. Try:
- Sanding one drawer front
- Cleaning one brush
- Choosing one paint color
- Sketching one idea
- Setting a 3‑minute timer for one task you want to start or even finish
The goal isn’t progress — it’s activation. Once your hands move, your mind follows. Why it works: Micro‑tasks bypass the brain’s threat response. You’re not “starting a big project,” you’re doing something small and safe. That’s how momentum is built.
Change Your Environment to Interrupt the Stagnation
Your surroundings influence your creativity more than you think. When your space feels stale, your ideas do too. Try:
- Moving your project to a different table
- Working near a window
- Turning on a lamp instead of overhead lighting
- Playing a new playlist
- Opening the door for fresh air
- Putting it all down and going for a walk, especially if it’s raining ♥There is NOTHING like a stroll in the rain to inspire you again.
Even a 10% shift in environment can create a 50% shift in energy. It doesn’t have to be something big, it just has to be something. Why it works: Your brain loves novelty. A new sensory cue can reset your internal rhythm and re‑spark curiosity.
Reconnect With Your Materials Without Expecting Anything
A creative block often comes from pressure — pressure to produce, to perform, to make something “worth posting.” Pressure that we put on ourselves mostly. By reconnecting in a way where nothing is expected to come from it you remove the pressure entirely opening the door once again.
Remove the outcome entirely. Things like:
- Running your hand over raw wood
- Flipping through transfers or papers
- Opening a paint jar just to look at the color, the depth, the movement and the way it reacts differently to various varieties f wood species.
- Testing a brushstroke, a blend or even a new technique on scrap wood
- Sorting hardware. One of my personal favorites is sorting my curated antique hardware. Yes, I’m a furniture nerd and there’s no shame in my game.
Your hands will remember what your mind forgets and you are once again a conduit for ideas and inspiration. Why it works: Tactile engagement reactivates the sensory pathways tied to creativity. It’s grounding, soothing, and often enough to wake up your artistic instincts. In layman’s terms, it reminds you what it’s all about… pressure free.
Switch Creative Mediums to Reset Your Brain

When my main craft feels blocked, my creativity isn’t gone — it’s just bottlenecked. By refocusing myself I maintain my creative need in a stress-free way. I’ll shift my attention by:
- Baking something simple
- Rearranging a shelf
- Doodling ideas for my long-term project I’ve been working on
- Making a mood board. I love a good mood board and Canva makes it easy to create one for yourself!
- Journaling about how you want a piece to feel. I find journaling to be a must in my life and I spend copious amounts of time documenting many different things for myself and for my business and brand. Cross‑training your creativity keeps the muscle warm without forcing the main project. Why it works: A different medium removes the pressure of expertise. You get to play again — and play is where ideas are born.
Make Something Intentionally Ugly
I cannot stress the usefulness of this liberating task. This is one of the most powerful tools for breaking perfection paralysis. Set a timer for 15 minutes and create something you know won’t be good:
- A messy paint blend
- A chaotic sketch
- A sloppy decoupage test
- A color combo you’d never normally try
The goal is liberation, not beauty. Why it works: Perfectionism is the #1 cause of creative block. When you remove the expectation of beauty, your creativity can breathe again, an there is no harder on ones work than oneself.
Revisit a Project You Loved (Not to Fix It — But to Remember Yourself)
Pull up photos or videos of a piece you were proud of. Rewatch a video where you felt in flow. Revisit a project that made you feel like, “Yes. This is what I’m meant to do.” You’re not trying to recreate it — you’re reconnecting with the version of you who made it. Our version and story changes as time progresses and it’s easy to forget who we are at the core. Why it works: Memory is a powerful motivator. When you remember your capability, your confidence returns. Confidence is 90% of success.
Return to Your Why — The Reason You Create at All
Creative block often shows up when you drift from the heart of your craft. This can happen for many reasons including the ever popular “life happens” one. When I find myself drifting into that unwanted headspace, I ask myself:
- Why do I create?
- What does my craft give me emotionally?
- What part of the process feels like home?
- What do I miss when I’m not creating?
For many of us, the studio is the therapy. The ritual. The grounding. The place where the noise quiets and the world makes sense again. My studio is my sacred space. MY space. A place I can go to create, sit, rest. When you reconnect with that truth, the pressure dissolves — and the work becomes a refuge instead of a task.
A Closing Thought
A creative block isn’t a dead end. It’s a pause — a doorway — a moment of recalibration. You don’t have to wait for inspiration to return. You can meet it halfway. Choose one tiny action today. One motion. One moment of connection with your craft. Your creativity isn’t gone. It’s simply waiting for you to remember who you are.
~ xoxo, Shawn

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