About this episode
Create Anyway: You’re Allowed to Make Art is a limited podcast series for people who did the responsible thing—built careers, supported families, stayed busy—and still feel a quiet pull toward creativity.This series is for:Adults who want to make art but feel “too late” or “too busy”People who were told they’re not artists—or can’t make a living creatingProfessionals and parents craving meaning, not hustleAnyone who feels creatively restless but doesn’t want to blow up their lifeEpisode SummaryIf you’ve ever felt like there’s something more you want from life—not more success, not more productivity—but more meaning… this episode is for you.Welcome to Create Anyway: You’re Allowed to Make Art.This series is for people who chose responsibility—and still want something more.And today, I want to start with something simple.You weren’t wrong.You weren’t wrong to want to make art.Episode Summary:In the opening episode of Create Anyway: You’re Allowed to Make Art, we explore the quiet pull toward creativity that never fully disappears—even after careers, families, and responsibility take center stage.This episode is for people who did the practical thing, chose stability, and still feel like something is missing. It’s not a call to quit your job or reinvent your life overnight. It’s an invitation to stop judging yourself for wanting something more.You’re not late.You’re not broken.And wanting to create was never the problem.Many people who want to make art were never told to stop.They were told to be realistic.To choose something stable.To be responsible.To keep creativity on the side.Over time, art becomes something we postpone—until “later,” when life slows down. But for many adults, later never really comes… and the desire to create doesn’t go away.Episode 1 of Create Anyway: You’re Allowed to Make Art is about naming that desire without shame.This episode speaks to:Adults who feel creatively unfulfilled despite career successParents and professionals who feel “too busy” to make artPeople who believe they missed their chance to be artistsAnyone who’s been told art isn’t prac