Take time to find creative solitude—a sacred stillness to repair, restore, and renew yourself. A quiet sanctuary where the external fades and the internal world finds voice.
As singer Tom Petty wrote, “Excuse me if I have some place in my mind where I go time to time.”
Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau turned to nature for clarity. Ernest Hemingway found peace in Paris. Each sought solitude not to escape—but to return stronger.
“Never be afraid to sit awhile and think,” playwright Lorraine Hansberry once encouraged.
In silence, get in touch with the radiant layers of who you are. Celebrate the emotions that help you feel, the body that moves you to action, the thoughts that allow you to think, and the spirit that fills your heart with faith and hope.
Visionary R. Buckminster Fuller once asked, “What is the most important thing we can think about at this extraordinary moment?”
Let solitude be your answer. A whisper of the wind. A sacred return to center. There, creativity blooms.
