How to Embrace Your Inner Brat
Creativity means not caring what people think. Need help not caring? Summon the defiant spirit within. Martha Beck reports.
Photo: Thinkstock
It was about the fourth time my daughter Katie had made cookies on her own. She was 12, which is precariously close to 13, which in humans is not an age but a serious mental disorder. As Katie whipped the flour into the butter before adding the eggs, her father nudged her aside, taking the electric mixer from her hand.
"No, not that way," John said. "Here's how I do it."
Our usually timid daughter yanked the mixer back and said, with cool conviction, "I really don't give a damn how you do it."
John and I stared at each other across the kitchen, thinking, as it later turned out, the very same thoughts: that neither of us ever would have spoken to our parents that way; that Katie's collision course with puberty was revealing new, profoundly bitchy aspects of her personality; and that we couldn't have been prouder.
It had taken each of us nearly 30 years to claim clear identities, to stop censoring ourselves in deference to the social pressure that weighs so heavily on every human being not raised by wolves (wolves are bitchy by definition). Yet here was our little girl, barely out of childhood, already baring her teeth and growling at someone who presumed to override her personal style. What a great kid! What an auspicious display of a healthy inner bitch! Maybe we were doing something right after all!
It's no coincidence that Katie became a highly creative cook, the kind who can not only follow recipes but invent new flavor and texture combinations. Snapping at her father was an important step in establishing a safe place for her creativity to thrive. All creativity relies on this resistance to the opinions and interference of others. To be truly creative we must be willing to say to every other person on earth, "I really don't give a damn how you do it."
This is a very dangerous undertaking. The uniqueness that allows us to be creative is also the place where we stand absolutely alone and are, therefore, most vulnerable. It's not true that "there is nothing new under the sun": There has never been, and never will be, anyone who sees, thinks, or responds exactly the way you do. Whether you're revolutionizing physics or making a quilt, you must display your differences to make a difference. But idiosyncrasies are often labeled weird, unseemly, even evil. The immense risk of creativity, then, is that it requires expressing your truest self, with a very high likelihood of being misunderstood and condemned.
To attempt this without a good, strong inner bitch is not only reckless, it's impossible. Your creativity will likely never emerge if you don't let your bitchy side do its work. When I taught studio art at Harvard, I saw a host of incredibly bright, talented, cooperative students who followed academic rules to perfection—and drew exactly as they had in fourth grade. Why? Because that's the age at which self-consciousness typically sets in, making young artists fearful of looking inadequate or doing something "wrong." My biggest task was not to pass on the rules of perspective or color theory, which these students learned easily, but to stimulate their inner bitches, so that their growing technical competence could channel an authentic personal vision rather than hollow imitations of some style they thought "safe."
If you are a stymied creator—a born dancer who's too self-conscious to move, a social reformer afraid of communicating your ideals, or a poet so blocked you've never written a word—you don't necessarily need more classes in dancing or speaking or writing. Training is important, but it won't take you anywhere unless you frolic with your inner bitch.
There are bitches, and then there are bitches....
At this point I would like to clarify my terms by relating the following joke: On freshman welcoming day at a prestigious college, two roommates meet for the first time. One is a small-town girl on scholarship, the other a wealthy prep-school graduate. The small-town girl greets her new roomie with a huge smile and asks, "So, where you from?"
The preppie sniffs. "From a place where we know better than to end our sentences with prepositions."
Her roommate, jolly as ever, replies, "So, where you from, bitch?"
The important concept here is that there are two types of bitchiness going on in the story. Actually, if you think about it, the preppie's scornful, shaming behavior is more "catty" than "bitchy." As we all know, the word bitch refers to a female dog, and dogs are virtually incapable of scorn. If a dog witnessed the most embarrassing moment of your life—if it were standing right there when you committed a horrifying act of flatulence in front of the entire ladies literary league—the dog's immediate and sincere reaction would be "Whoa! Awesome!" On the other hand, if you breached protocol with a cat—for example, by offering the wrong brand of tuna—it would give you a look that could freeze hydrogen, then ignore you.
It is crucial to remember that catty thoughts or actions do not really represent your inner bitch. Cattiness appears when shame-bound people shame others, out of anxiety or spite. The message is, Do it my way, loser. Actually, the small-town roommate in the story is the one who displays genuine connection with her inner bitch. She remains cheerfully impervious to scorn, holding her own with humor and dignity. Above all, she refuses to play the shame game.
Whenever you feel shame, consider it a signal to act forcefully—not by beating yourself up, but by siccing your inner bitch on the shame itself. So you've made mistakes? Big, fat, hairy deal, your inner bitch will say. Learn from your errors and do better next time. Afraid you'll fail and look stupid? Your inner bitch doesn't give a damn how you look; she'd rather try and fail than not try at all. Let your bitchiest side attack your shame, actively and aggressively, until you are certain that no choice you make is based on either the fear of being shamed or the intent to shame anyone else. There is enormous power in this, in holding your head up and refusing to be shame's prisoner. It is the prerequisite to all creativity. Remember, a dog's role is to chase catty things, and cats typically run like hell when they're jumped by a feisty bitch.
Next: How to embrace your bratty side
"No, not that way," John said. "Here's how I do it."
Our usually timid daughter yanked the mixer back and said, with cool conviction, "I really don't give a damn how you do it."
John and I stared at each other across the kitchen, thinking, as it later turned out, the very same thoughts: that neither of us ever would have spoken to our parents that way; that Katie's collision course with puberty was revealing new, profoundly bitchy aspects of her personality; and that we couldn't have been prouder.
It had taken each of us nearly 30 years to claim clear identities, to stop censoring ourselves in deference to the social pressure that weighs so heavily on every human being not raised by wolves (wolves are bitchy by definition). Yet here was our little girl, barely out of childhood, already baring her teeth and growling at someone who presumed to override her personal style. What a great kid! What an auspicious display of a healthy inner bitch! Maybe we were doing something right after all!
It's no coincidence that Katie became a highly creative cook, the kind who can not only follow recipes but invent new flavor and texture combinations. Snapping at her father was an important step in establishing a safe place for her creativity to thrive. All creativity relies on this resistance to the opinions and interference of others. To be truly creative we must be willing to say to every other person on earth, "I really don't give a damn how you do it."
This is a very dangerous undertaking. The uniqueness that allows us to be creative is also the place where we stand absolutely alone and are, therefore, most vulnerable. It's not true that "there is nothing new under the sun": There has never been, and never will be, anyone who sees, thinks, or responds exactly the way you do. Whether you're revolutionizing physics or making a quilt, you must display your differences to make a difference. But idiosyncrasies are often labeled weird, unseemly, even evil. The immense risk of creativity, then, is that it requires expressing your truest self, with a very high likelihood of being misunderstood and condemned.
To attempt this without a good, strong inner bitch is not only reckless, it's impossible. Your creativity will likely never emerge if you don't let your bitchy side do its work. When I taught studio art at Harvard, I saw a host of incredibly bright, talented, cooperative students who followed academic rules to perfection—and drew exactly as they had in fourth grade. Why? Because that's the age at which self-consciousness typically sets in, making young artists fearful of looking inadequate or doing something "wrong." My biggest task was not to pass on the rules of perspective or color theory, which these students learned easily, but to stimulate their inner bitches, so that their growing technical competence could channel an authentic personal vision rather than hollow imitations of some style they thought "safe."
If you are a stymied creator—a born dancer who's too self-conscious to move, a social reformer afraid of communicating your ideals, or a poet so blocked you've never written a word—you don't necessarily need more classes in dancing or speaking or writing. Training is important, but it won't take you anywhere unless you frolic with your inner bitch.
There are bitches, and then there are bitches....
At this point I would like to clarify my terms by relating the following joke: On freshman welcoming day at a prestigious college, two roommates meet for the first time. One is a small-town girl on scholarship, the other a wealthy prep-school graduate. The small-town girl greets her new roomie with a huge smile and asks, "So, where you from?"
The preppie sniffs. "From a place where we know better than to end our sentences with prepositions."
Her roommate, jolly as ever, replies, "So, where you from, bitch?"
The important concept here is that there are two types of bitchiness going on in the story. Actually, if you think about it, the preppie's scornful, shaming behavior is more "catty" than "bitchy." As we all know, the word bitch refers to a female dog, and dogs are virtually incapable of scorn. If a dog witnessed the most embarrassing moment of your life—if it were standing right there when you committed a horrifying act of flatulence in front of the entire ladies literary league—the dog's immediate and sincere reaction would be "Whoa! Awesome!" On the other hand, if you breached protocol with a cat—for example, by offering the wrong brand of tuna—it would give you a look that could freeze hydrogen, then ignore you.
It is crucial to remember that catty thoughts or actions do not really represent your inner bitch. Cattiness appears when shame-bound people shame others, out of anxiety or spite. The message is, Do it my way, loser. Actually, the small-town roommate in the story is the one who displays genuine connection with her inner bitch. She remains cheerfully impervious to scorn, holding her own with humor and dignity. Above all, she refuses to play the shame game.
Whenever you feel shame, consider it a signal to act forcefully—not by beating yourself up, but by siccing your inner bitch on the shame itself. So you've made mistakes? Big, fat, hairy deal, your inner bitch will say. Learn from your errors and do better next time. Afraid you'll fail and look stupid? Your inner bitch doesn't give a damn how you look; she'd rather try and fail than not try at all. Let your bitchiest side attack your shame, actively and aggressively, until you are certain that no choice you make is based on either the fear of being shamed or the intent to shame anyone else. There is enormous power in this, in holding your head up and refusing to be shame's prisoner. It is the prerequisite to all creativity. Remember, a dog's role is to chase catty things, and cats typically run like hell when they're jumped by a feisty bitch.
Next: How to embrace your bratty side