• The Creative Cure - Mental Health for Creatives

  • By: Petra Borzynski
  • Podcast

The Creative Cure - Mental Health for Creatives

By: Petra Borzynski
  • Summary

  • Welcome to the Creative Cure, the podcast that explores questions related to creativity and the mental health of creative artists. Whether you are a writer, musician, visual artist, or any other type of creative: Join me as I lift the curtain on the creative process and the mental health challenges that sometimes throw a spanner in the works. If you would like to listen to more than the latest episode, please join my Substack channel.

    creativecure.substack.com
    Petra Borzynski
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Episodes
  • About My Podcasts
    May 23 2024

    Hey everyone, I’m quickly checking in to let you know that I will stop turning my articles into podcasts.

    Why, you might ask…

    It is mostly lack of time—writing is something I can do reasonably quickly when inspiration strikes. A podcast takes time: to record, to edit, to get out into the ether. At this point, it simply seems counterintuitive to spend hours on recording and editing something that I have already provided for you in written form.

    “But accessibility!” I hear you say.

    Well, accessible information does not mean I have to record a podcast. I will still make sure that screen-readers can read out my articles without problems, and the good thing about Substack is that I can also very quickly provide a read-out version for you without having to do all the talking and adding the bells and whistles myself. The Substack read-out function is available via the app—just download it in via your App Store and then click on the little play button near the top of the article. Et voilà! (You can already try it with this one—the AI voice isn’t *too* shocking 🤣. I picked one for you that sounds a lot better than the Substack-native one. It’s really surprisingly okay, give it a chance).

    Listening to a podcast over reading an article is a personal preference, and I appreciate that some people have that preference.

    Writing and article instead of recording a podcast with more or less the same content is also preference. And I always was and always will be a writer and reader. I hardly ever listen to podcasts myself—it is simply not my medium, and I don’t feel a particularly strong connection to them, neither as a listener nor as a creator.

    What does this mean for you?

    I have just opened my podcast archive to free access again, so all old podcasts will still be there for you to listen to. I just won’t record any new ones. But the Substack channel will keep on existing—in newsletter form, via the written word only. With Substack-native read-outs in the app.

    For those of you who are also subscribed to Shadow Truths: That podcast archive was always freely available anyway, so nothing will change for you apart from no new episodes being added in the future. But the story exploration will continue as usual, and the next issue will land with you soon.

    I hope you are okay with “just” reading in the future, and I will see you all soon (and I have other exciting things for this channel in store, but more about that another time).

    P.S.: If you would like to connect with other creative artists and keep access to my articles and read-outs: You can do all of this via our community on Substack (it’s free).

    If you are interested in exploring mental health and creativity through a lens of storytelling, please also check out my newsletter The Sandman: Shadow Truths, which alternates with The Creative Cure.

    You can also follow me on Facebook.



    Get full access to The Creative Cure at creativecure.substack.com/subscribe
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    2 mins
  • Nature’s Muse: Unveiling the Power of Nature on Creative Minds
    Mar 22 2024

    In the tranquil embrace of nature, where whispers of leaves and the symphony of streams reign, the spirit of Thalia, the Greek muse of idyllic poetry, flourishes...

    Now, if you think that sounds a bit contrived, you might even be right, but since I’ve chosen an episode-title that talks about invoking muses, I had to find a hook to draw you in somehow, so I’ve attacked you with my finest purple prose. But I’m also half-serious about it—for artists navigating the tumultuous seas of their minds (still not done with the purple prose), nature can serve as an anchor. Connecting with nature can actually be quite a profound step towards mental well-being.

    But we have to take that step.

    And we often don’t, glued to screens and phones all day, hunching over our desks or at least spending significant amounts of time indoors, perpetually making excuses that we have deadlines, and keeping our butts firmly planted on our seats. I am as guilty of it as the next person. And that’s why I decided to make today’s episode about (purple prose alert again) letting nature weave its magic to nurture our creativity and soothe our minds.

    If you would like to connect with other creative artists who love nature and exchange feedback, support, and inspiration with them: You can do all of this via our community on Substack (it’s free).

    If you would like to access all information mentioned in this episode and get a written transcript: You can find it here.

    If you are interested in exploring mental health and creativity through a lens of storytelling, please also check out my newsletter The Sandman: Shadow Truths, which alternates with The Creative Cure and also has its own companion podcast.

    You can also follow me on Facebook.

    Thanks to WatR for creating the music.



    Get full access to The Creative Cure at creativecure.substack.com/subscribe
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    18 mins
  • Cutting Down On Social Media
    Jan 19 2024

    It’s been a while—I’ve been fairly absent from my social media accounts since October, mostly due to several writing and other projects. And honestly: It feels so much better in so many ways.

    But fret not, I haven’t abandoned my podcasts. In this episode of The Creative Cure, I will talk about cutting down on social media accounts, removing ourselves from the pressure to be “KLT”d and most of all: Changing the structures that still pressure us into giving our knowledge away for free or far too cheaply because “that’s the way to get your foot in the door, and then the work will come.”

    If you would like to share how trying to keep up with social media affects you, or what your experiences with “offering knowledge for exposure” are: You can do both via our community on Substack (it’s free).

    If you would like to access all information mentioned in this episode and get a written transcript: You can find it here.

    If you are interested in exploring mental health and creativity through a lens of storytelling, please also check out my newsletter The Sandman: Shadow Truths, which alternates with The Creative Cure and also has its own companion podcast.

    You can also follow me on Facebook (as per this episode, you’ll not find much joy following my other, defunct accounts ;)).

    Thanks to WatR for creating the music.



    Get full access to The Creative Cure at creativecure.substack.com/subscribe
    Show More Show Less
    15 mins

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