\xa0
\nAbout the\xa0author
\nHighly regarded for his provocative style, James Victore is a graphic designer, art educator and dynamic high in-demand speaker on creativity. He lectures and teaches regularly around the globe, inspiring people to illuminate their individual gifts in order to achieve personal greatness.
\nRaised in upstate New York, James moved to New York City when he was 19 years old and by age 23, after dropping out of two different colleges, he became an apprentice to noted book-jacket designer Paul Bacon. It was with Bacon that Victore found his voice as a designer and he began to take charge of his own education and career as a self-taught artist and designer.
\nDescribed as \u201cpart Darth Vader, part Yoda,\u201d James is widely known for his timely wisdom and impassioned views about design and it\u2019s place in the world. As well as founding his own design studio in 1990, James taught at the School of Visual Arts in New York City.
\nVictore\u2019s posters have been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and are in the permanent collections of the Palais du Louvre in Paris, the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., the Design Museum in Zurich, and the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam.
\nSource: https://www.jamesvictore.com/about
\n\xa0
\nAbout the\xa0book
\n\u201cFeck\u201d is the creative tool kit that you need in your life. It is about living and creating freely, without the stress of others expectations or even your own thoughts about being perfect. 80 chapters of inspiration and thoughtful practices. Order more copies! You need this book, but so do your co workers or your partner or mom or your college kid, heck, buy one for your boss!
\nSource: https://www.jamesvictore.com/get-inspired
\n\xa0
\nBig idea #1\u200a\u2014\u200aBe\xa0weird
\nThere\u2019s a whole section of this book about being yourself about embracing your childhood weirdness, using creativity, having an opinion, and not fitting in.
\nJames uses the analogy of \u2018letting your light shine\u2019, like in the gospel song \u2018this little light of mine\u2019, but we often don\u2019t do that because it\u2019s both too easy and too hard.
\nWe forget how to be creative as we get older and how at some point the weirdness that we have as kids becomes a target rather than an asset. And so the hiding and the morphing into the being the same as everyone else begins.\xa0
\nFor most of us, this starts at home (chapter one is actually called \u2018your parents were wrong\u2019, a strong way to start any book). We\u2019re often presented with predefined pathways as options of what we can be when we grow up, which is obviously a horrible question to ask anyone, never mind a child. And these offered pathways are usually quite narrow.
\nJames says that whatever we want to be, be it an accountant or an artist, or a songwriter or an engineer, you should be yourself, have an opinion, and do it your way.
\n\xa0
\nBig idea #2\u200a\u2014\u200aThe first rule of business: fun
\n\xa0
\nWithout fun, you are merely one of the working dead.\n
Without the fun, all of the hard work will be much more painful, and longevity will be much harder to maintain.
\nFun allows us to test innovate, make mistakes and stay curious. It allows us to bring our personality into our products and services, which ultimately is what people love. People are drawn to products and services that have some character and some personality to them.
\nThis doesn\u2019t mean it won\u2019t be hard. James isn\u2019t painting this overly perfect or overly saccharin view of what life or work will, or should, be like. He talks a lot about quality and skill, there\u2019s a whole section on sharpening the axe and building and maintaining your skillset. He talks about doing the work, even when you don\u2019t feel like it, and the importance of having a plan. But having fun and making yourself happy first makes all of this possible.
\nAfter all excitement breeds, excitement.
\n\xa0
\nBig idea #3\u200a\u2014\u200aFeck Perfuction
\nNobody\u2019s perfect, even you, and it\u2019s easy to make a myriad of excuses or \u2018big buts\u2019 as James calls them to slip into comparisonitis, have shaky boundaries, or underselling ourselves by not asking for enough or by too much self-deprecation.
\nBuilding solid habits and embracing an action focused approach to work, experimentation, and mistake making means we can make things happen.
\nHe mentions a Buddhist parable, that the second arrow comes from our own hands. The first arrow that hits us might be something going wrong; your car breaking down, the train being delayed, someone criticizing you. But the second arrow comes from our own hands; we then berate ourselves, we let that thing that happened to us ruin our whole day or a whole week, rather than just letting it go and choosing to react in a way that\u2019s more productive. We get to choose whether to fire that second arrow into ourselves.
\nJames says we need to embrace the flaws. We need to turn them into features or strengths, and let go of the judgment of ourselves and others and get on and make something happen.
\n\xa0
\n\xa0
Support my book habit: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/stephsbookshelf
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.