You Don't Hatch by Waiting to Be Ready | Creative Growth for Artists

You Don't Hatch by Waiting to Be Ready | Creative Growth for Artists

March 25, 20266 min read

Here's what I find remarkable about the way a chick hatches: no one helps it.

The struggle has to happen from the inside. Not because the world is unkind, but because that very effort is what makes the chick strong enough to survive. If you crack the shell for it, you don't save it, you actually take away the very thing it needed most.

I think about that whenever someone tells me they're not ready to start creating.

That they're waiting until they feel more confident. Or until they have the right supplies. Or until life settles down a little.

You don't hatch by waiting to be ready. You hatch by doing the quiet, persistent work from within.

What "Not Ready" Really Means

I want to sit with this for a moment, because I think "I'm not ready" is one of the most misunderstood feelings a creative person can have.

It feels like a signal to wait. But what if it's actually a signal that you're right at the edge of something?

The discomfort of not feeling ready isn't a warning. It's resistance - and resistance, as any artist who has stared down a blank page knows, almost always shows up right before the work that matters most.

We've been conditioned to believe that confidence comes first, and action comes second. But in creative life, it almost always works the other way around. Confidence is something you build inside the doing, not something you acquire before you begin.

The Crack Forming

Creative breakthroughs rarely look the way we imagine them.

We picture a single dramatic moment - a sudden flood of inspiration, a finished piece that surprises even us, the day everything finally clicks. And sometimes that moment does come. But it almost never arrives without a long, invisible season of work that came before it.

Sometimes the work looks like sketching in a notebook no one ever sees.

Sometimes it's watching a tutorial three times before finally picking up the brush yourself.

Sometimes it's just starting again after a long gap - after weeks or months away - and not making it precious, just making it happen.

That's not nothing. That's the crack forming.

Every small act of showing up, however imperfect, however private, however small, is a tap from the inside of the shell. You may not see progress right away. It may not feel like anything significant is happening. But something is. The shell is weakening exactly where it needs to.

Why Creative Breakthroughs Always Start from the Inside

Here's the thing about external conditions: they will never be perfect.

There will always be a reason to wait. The supplies won't be quite right. The lighting in your space will be off. You'll be too tired, too busy, too out of practice, too unsure of where to begin. Life will not settle down on your behalf and hand you a quiet, golden window of creative time.

The artists who grow aren't the ones who waited for the right moment.
They're the ones who decided that an imperfect moment was enough.

Creative breakthroughs happen from the inside because that's the only place they can happen. No one can do this work for you. No tutorial, no course, no set of perfect supplies can substitute for the act of you picking something up and beginning. The resources can guide you. The community can encourage you. But the crack has to form from within.

That's not a hard truth. It's actually a deeply hopeful one.

Because it means no one can take this away from you either. Your creative growth doesn't depend on circumstances lining up. It depends on you - and you are already enough to begin.

What to Do When You Feel Stuck in the Shell

If you've been sitting with the feeling of not quite ready, here are a few simple ways to start tapping from the inside:

Start smaller than feels significant.
You don't need a full afternoon, a finished piece, or a grand plan. Five minutes with a sketchbook counts. A single color wash on a scrap of paper counts. Give yourself permission to make it tiny.

Remove the pressure of outcome.
Some of the most important creative work you'll ever do will never be seen by anyone. Practice doesn't have to be shareable to be valuable. Let some of it just be for you.

Come back without ceremony.
If you've been away from your creative practice for a while, don't wait until you feel inspired to return. Just return. Sit down, pick up the brush, and let the first thing be awkward. That's allowed.

Follow curiosity instead of confidence.
You don't need to feel sure. You just need to feel a small pull toward something. Follow that instead.

Let tutorials be a bridge, not a barrier.
Watching and learning is part of the process, not a substitute for it. When you find yourself watching a tutorial for the third time, that's usually a sign you're ready. Put it on in the background and just begin alongside it.

This Week: Something's Hatching

This week I painted a little chick hatching from its shell — and I'll be honest, it felt like the right subject at the right time.

Watercolor painting of a baby chick hatching from an egg, painted in soft spring tones

There's something quietly symbolic about painting a small creature in the middle of its breakthrough moment. Wings out, eyes wide, shell cracked open around it. It doesn't look polished, perfect or even realistic. It looks alive.

I put together a full step-by-step tutorial on YouTube if you'd like to paint along at your own pace:

The palette I used - "Something's Hatching" - is a soft set of spring tones: Soft Chick Yellow, Eggshell Cream, Warm Beak Orange, Shell Gray, and New Leaf Green. It's gentle, cohesive, and honestly just makes you happy to look at.

But more than the tutorial itself, I hope this one is an invitation.

To pick up the brush. To tap from the inside. To let the crack form.

You don't have to be ready. You just have to begin.

A Few other Small Invitations

Thanks for reading this week.

If you're ready for a little more creativity in your life, you're welcome to download my free Whimsical Bird Trio tutorial - a simple, joyful project to ease you into making more art. When you sign up for the free watercolor tutorial, you'll also receive a free subscription to the Creative Heart Journal; it's published weekly and is delivered straight to your email inbox. Click this link to sign up:https://creativewannabes.com/sign-up

Please join my free Facebook group where you will find:

❤️simple, approachable creative prompts

❤️encouragement without pressure or perfection

❤️a kind, supportive community of women

❤️opportunities to explore creativity in different ways

You can join the Facebook group here:https://www.facebook.com/groups/createwithmissusmidlife


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