Restless by Design
There’s a question that shows up often in creative work. Not always out loud. Just beneath the surface. Am I actually good at this… or have I just gotten lucky so far? It’s easy to assume that question is personal. A reflection of ability.Consistency.Whether you belong in the work at all. But the structure of these industries doesn’t always offer a clear answer. In more traditional paths, there are markers. Progression.Titles.A sense that if you keep going, you’ll eventually arrive somewhere stable. Creative work doesn’t function that way. Things change. Constantly. Trends shift.Opportunities appear and disappear.Entire ways of working evolve in a matter of years. Something can work once… and never exist in the same way again. That makes it difficult to locate yourself. To know where you stand. To feel like anything is fully solid. So the mind tries to make sense of it. And often, it turns inward. Maybe I don’t know what I’m doing.Maybe I’m not as good as people think.Maybe this won’t last. Those thoughts feel real. But they’re not always accurate. Sometimes they’re misdirected. Because what if the instability isn’t coming from you? What if it’s built into the environment itself? You don’t step onto wet grass and wonder if something is wrong with the ground. You know it’s going to give a little. You adjust without making it mean anything. Creative work is the same terrain. The wobble isn’t a warning. It’s just where you are. An environment where outcomes aren’t fixed. Where effort doesn’t always translate directly. Where timing, context, and demand shape the result as much as skill does. In that kind of landscape, confidence doesn’t have a stable place to land. So it moves. It rises and falls with each project.Each opportunity.Each moment of visibility or quiet. That movement can feel like inconsistency. Like something internal is off. But it isn’t always internal. It’s structural. And understanding that changes the interpretation. The feeling doesn’t disappear. But it stops meaning the same thing. Instead of proof that something is wrong… it becomes information. A signal that you’re working inside something that doesn’t hold still. Something that requires adaptability. That asks you to keep adjusting… without always knowing what’s next. That’s not always comfortable. There’s vulnerability in that. In not having a clear endpoint. In not being able to say, I’ve arrived. But there’s also something honest about it. Because the work itself is alive. It changes.It responds.It evolves with the world around it. And if you’re participating in it… you’re part of that movement too. Not outside of it. Inside of it. That’s where the shift happens. From trying to feel certain… to learning how to stay engaged without certainty. The question doesn’t go away. But it lands differently. Less like a verdict. More like a condition of being in the work. I don’t know if I belong here. Maybe that’s not a problem to solve. Maybe it’s what it feels like… to be inside something that doesn’t offer permanent footing. That doesn’t make you behind. Or unqualified. Or lost. It means you’re participating in something that is still moving. And learning how to stand there anyway. That’s not instability. That’s the work. Get full access to Studio Letters by Annie Heise Alden at anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe [https://anniealdendesign.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
7 episodios
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