Worship Leaders and Creatives: Here’s How to Leverage Sensitivity

Many who are very creative deal with this thing called sensitivity. It means that there sometimes is a thought, experience or encounter that most people easily forget that stays fresh in the mind of a creative. The ability to relive an event in full color can bring forth an amazing song or powerful painting. But, both the pleasure and the pain can be a trap to the creative if not leveraged properly. Perhaps, PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder) inflicts more of us than others for the same reason.

If the event was positive, then disappointment of current reality could lead to depression. Worse, the most painful moments in life fade slowly, leaving an open wound in need of healing. The healing process for a creative then is a bit different–because creatives truly are, different. Where others may cope by refocusing on a new activity, the creative is trapped, stuck, obsessed. So, my personal experience as a sensitive and creative as well as my work with many of the same has taught me a few things.

These are five ways I think we can leverage sensitivity.

  1. Letting go needs a ceremony. Long after the world has moved beyond using they Papyrus font, you have to move ahead with the times. But, it may be you need to have a party to mark the move. When you realize that it really is a big deal to change, change then is possible. Do you minimize the fact that letting go actually hurts?
  2. Pain needs to have meaning. When walking through the tough times, pain can and should make sense. That does not mean everything happens for a reason, just that you have a reason and purpose. You need to heal for this to happen, though. If it is a wound someone has caused, this means you must find that bigger meaning in yourself. Of course, faith helps with this. Christ suffered, but for a cause and for love. And, it was not fair. Knowing your sacrifice is for a greater good allows you see more than the pain. The question “why” is always the right one. Is there a purpose bigger than you that you are working towards?
  3.  The future needs a dreamer. If you have failed or lost much in the past, the hardest thing to do is to see a future let alone dream about it. Depression robs this energy with obsessive thinking about events you cannot change. This pit not only feels like sinking, it could sink you. We all have loss and terrible circumstance. But, they already happened! No positive energy can come from reliving the past when there are things today you can do. What positive and possible changes in your life do you ponder? Do you ponder your dream or doom?
  4. The human race needs you to join it. Even though you are possibly more empathetic than the rest of the planet and get messed up because of that, you are still human. I should not complain that people don’t “get me” when I do not spend the time and heart to “get them” as well! Creatives live some things larger than life. But, does that mean we are really all that different? It is easy to stay within our tribe, but there is much to learn from the rest of the human race as well. Feeling for a person is one thing. Action is another. Do I actually appreciate the people later that I have empathy for in the moment?
  5. Your life is a story that needs telling. We can wear bitterness or can excel in sharing the pain and joys of our lives in healthier ways. Our personal stories as people are a powerful thing. The plot line of our lives can draw out the best in others, inspiring them to love, challenging them to think, and soothing their wounds with the knowledge of shared pain. Your story matters, even if others do not feel it with you they way you feel it. Do I take joy in telling my own story as a creative?

I am still working on myself, but have found these are helping a bit when I see the sensitivity in my life. Any feedback from my fellow creatives and non-creatives alike?

POSTED ON December 12, 2016

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Rich Kirkpatrick is a writer, speaker, and musician. Rich was recently rated #13 of the “Top 75 Religion Bloggers” by Newsmax.com, having also received recognition in Worship Leader Magazine as “Editor’s Choice” for the “Best of the Best” of blogs in 2011, 2014, 2015 and 2016. He is the author of, The Six Hats of the Worship Leader, building into the life of church ministry through consulting, coaching, and speaking. Rich is a ministry veteran, serving in roles from worship leadership, communications, to executive teams. Currently, Rich writes for his blog RKblog.com and several other sites and publications. He teaches across the country for the National Worship Leader Conferences. As a musician, Rich is a songwriter and recording artist, currently with the group A Beautiful Liturgy while employed as a local church musician.