This was the question posed by Emily Rose.
That is a strange question for me because most of my art is digital. It doesn't exist as an object, so the idea that I would be protecting it from harm or holding onto it for dear life doesn't make sense. However, I find myself treating my art (whether it is a poem, a composition, or even a blog post) like a summer fling. I become obsessed with it for a short time - reading it or listening to it over and over again and making small edits. Then I leave it alone - pretty tired of it, really - and move on to someone/something else. By the time I'm done with it, it is wasted on me. However, with the really good ones, I'll go back and visit and have a cup of coffee with it months or years later. I'll remember why I liked it in the first place, or wonder what on gods green earth I was thinking.
That is a strange question for me because most of my art is digital. It doesn't exist as an object, so the idea that I would be protecting it from harm or holding onto it for dear life doesn't make sense. However, I find myself treating my art (whether it is a poem, a composition, or even a blog post) like a summer fling. I become obsessed with it for a short time - reading it or listening to it over and over again and making small edits. Then I leave it alone - pretty tired of it, really - and move on to someone/something else. By the time I'm done with it, it is wasted on me. However, with the really good ones, I'll go back and visit and have a cup of coffee with it months or years later. I'll remember why I liked it in the first place, or wonder what on gods green earth I was thinking.
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