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When YOU Disappear Your Masterpiece Appears

Mindfulness

“Happiness is absorption.” ~T.E. Lawrence

During my years in university, there was a cook that I remember to this day. He worked in the university grill. He was well known amongst the students and staff. For his happiness.

Whether it was 6AM or 6PM, whether it was weekday or weekend, sunshine or hail, he greeted everyone with a boisterous “Good morning. How are you this morning?”

There might have been forty people in the breakfast line and he would greet every single one the same way. Many, including myself, would often wonder how it was that a man could be so joyful. Regardless of the time or the day.

While this was the quality he was most known for, I found another which was even more impressive.

I once snuck into the kitchen to watch him cook. I wanted to see this man in his natural state. What was he like behind the scenes?

As he would make a grilled cheese sandwich, he would place the bread onto the grill as if it were made of glass. He placed two pieces of cheese onto the bread and he took his spatula and he pressed down evenly and gently.

His left hand poured a small bit of oil onto the pan, while his right handled the spatula. He placed the sandwich onto a plate. Precisely in the center. He took a knife and pressed his left palm upon the top of the blade and pressed down, and then after it was cut he flicked his left hand into the air as if it were a show.

But there was no one there to watch. No one that he knew of, that is.

Suddenly one of the servers dropped a plate which fell and shattered about thirty feet from him. He didn’t so much as flinch. His focus remained on the sandwich. On his ultimate creation. All the while, his lips remained pursed in concentration. His sleeves hung loose at the wrist. The entire affair was done with such rhythm, such grace. It was a ballet.

I remain convinced to this day that he did not even hear the plate fall.

I have spent years giving myself to my endeavors. It was difficult in the beginning. Distractions were the order of the day. And the mind was difficult to settle.

But it is much easier now. In fact, I have used this approach not only with work but with my daily existence. And things happen of their own accord. Whether it is playing the piano or writing a discourse, the fingers seem to find their own way. The instincts and the motions come to me rather than from me. And I sit watching the beautiful dance unfold.

This, my friends, is what I have discovered is the secret of making a masterpiece of your craft.

Society, from childhood forward, is taught to do things according to a certain technique. In a certain way. According to a certain methodology.

Superiors judge the individual for how well they follow the methodology. How good the result is. And whether every direction is adhered to. The type of individuals that are created in this manner are not leaders but followers. What is being taught is not creativity, but mimicry.

Is it a wonder that the creative, the elite, in any discipline are so few? It is not that only a subset of human beings harbor creativity. It is that only a subset choose to nurture it.

The world is addicted to the “how to.” And there is no shortage of individuals to indulge them.

Creativity is a profound rebellion. That which comes from a sacred place within you is far superior than that which comes from the world around you.

The secret of work lies not in the comparing of the result against a prevailing standard. The secret of work lies not in following a recipe. The secret of work lies not in the praise that it garners.

The secret of work lies in the state of the human being performing it. The secret of work lies not in mindfulness. But mindlessness.

Mindlessness?

Yes, mindLESSness.

If you examine an event or a time in your life when you created something valuable, a masterpiece of your creation, you will find that time disappeared. During those minutes or hours in which you worked, nothing else in the world existed. You were the only person in the world. And your task was the most important thing in the world.

There was no time. There was no distraction. There was no mind.

And most glorious of all, there was no YOU.

Your hands worked of their own accord. Dancing to a rhythm all their own. Neuronal impulses traveled directly from brain to fingertips, bypassing YOU altogether.

There was no thought of what it might look like. There was no hope of anyone liking it. There was no fear of it being ridiculed. The entire affair was thoughtless, mindless, and egoless. This is how masterpieces are created.

In the end, it is YOU that stands between you and your masterpiece.

When you become lost in what you are doing . . .

When the mind goes away . . .

When YOU disappear . . .

Your masterpiece appears.

Zen man image via Shutterstock

About Kapil Gupta

Through his research on the human mind, Dr. Gupta has discovered the manner by which to transcend the mind. He travels the globe teaching audiences to transcend the mind in order to transform their life into a true living. And their work into a masterpiece. Dr. Gupta and his work can be found at KapilGuptaMD.com.

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Omar

Hi Kapil,
Thank you for this insightful article. I agree that creativity stems whenever the rational mind and ego are put aside and start to move with the flow of life itself. I believe that many of history’s genius’ who created anything of value were highly connected to the Source and were very spiritual beings. I also agree that we all have this creative instinct within us which becomes availabe once we move from ‘doing’ to ‘being.’

Kapil Gupta MD

Thank you, Omar. A human being is at his best when he makes himself AVAILABLE to his creativity, rather than seeing himself as a creator of it.

Peace Within

Thanks for sharing. Will take this into consideration when I work on my art.

Kapil Gupta MD

Allow the virgin glory of your art to emerge uncontaminated by effortful action.

Charlotte

This couldn’t have fallen on a better day. On a day where one rationalised too much, where one didn’t except being illogical, where one didn’t except their natural state.
Thank you Dr. Gupta, inspiring words, beautifully put.

Kapil Gupta MD

Dear Charlotte:
Thank you for your wise words. Rationalism and logic are domains of the intellect. The human being uses the intellect, but lives through the heart.

Nigel Cooper

As an author of fiction, I can wholeheartedly confirm everything in Dr Gupta’s superb article. I find that my most creative writing happens when my mind is empty and I’m not giving it any thought whatsoever. What an inspiring article. It is great to have some things confirmed, and to learn some new things as well. Thank you Dr Gupta.

Kapil Gupta MD

Thank You.
Nigel, my friend, The greatest book you will ever write is the one that writes itself.

Jessa

I adore this message, and it was just what I needed to hear today. I have spent 23 hours in the last two days absorbed in a task. Funny thing is, it was a task I didn’t particularly like, but finishing it was an essential piece of my larger masterpiece project. It was stressful and difficult but hours practically disappeared as I worked through it. At the end of it all, I stood back, looked at it, and judged it. I haven’t been able to shake the disappointed, frustrated, dissatisfied feelings all night. Now I can look again with fresher eyes.

Kapil Gupta MD

Yes, Jessa. As you said, “hours practically disappeared.” Time is something we notice when we are not absorbed. And it is something superfluous when we are fully engaged. When we disappear, time does as well.

Anne Ricci

I love your post. “Superiors judge the individual for how well they follow the methodology. How good the result is. And whether every direction is adhered to. The type of individuals that are created in this manner are not leaders but followers. What is being taught is not creativity, but mimicry.” is SO true. I have 2 boys in primary school and kindergarten, and I’m teaching the older one that how the teacher wants it isn’t important; what’s important is learning, having fun, being able to imagine. He is very good at all this, so I encourage him a lot. Thanks for this great article!

Kapil Gupta MD

Thank you, Anne.

The world is in love with mimicry. And school has little to do with education. There are two discourses that I have written which would appeal to an individual of your sensibilities.

One is titled, The Underestimated Ingenuity Of The Human. The other is titled, Great Teachers Are Hesitant To Teach.

Anne, children of the world need more parents who correctly see things the way you seen them.

If you wish to read those discourses, feel free to email me and I will send you the links. (Kapil [at] KapilGuptaMD [dot] com)

Shannon

Dr. Gupta, What a wonderful post – thank you. I have had this experience at a very deep level recently. I was ‘given’ a creative task – to monologue about some parts of my life’s journey. I am not an actress, nor would I have ever thought to do this – even with the intent to help others (which is the monologue’s purpose). But I made arrangements, stepped up, began… and hardly remember what I did. I was out of the experience, just letting creativity flow, telling my stories without fear or being particular about how they were shared. The experience touched many hearts, and I am doing my monologue for the third time next month – on a real stage in front of nearly 100 people. It’s very meaningful to me as it’s part of my soul’s calling, and you’re right… I’ve just stepped out of the way… and magic is happening without me mucking it up 🙂 Thank you!

Kapil Gupta MD

Dear Shannon,

As you have so wonderfully discovered, the intelligence within you needs no help FROM you. Perfection comes not from a perfect doing, but from a perfect allowing.
Shannon, may your creativity be forever allowed to surface, untainted by the meddling fingers of yourself.