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The Creative Cure by Jacob Nordby: book review

 



The Creative Cure: How Finding and Freeing Your Inner Artist Can Heal Your Life (2021) is like a self-help book for creatives. After attending Nordby’s remote creativity workshop in March 2021, and reading his 2016 book Blessed are the Weird, I was keen to read his current book. 

 

Creativity in this context is about creating – anything – such as baking, cooking, gardening, writing, restoring, photographing, tidying, flower arranging, inventing, singing, imagining, hairstyling, sewing, volunteering, rescuing, carving, doodling … Nordby’s premise in this book is that creativity (‘a regular creative practice’) drives healing – i.e. that the process of writing is cathartic in which readers can approach life with the eyes and heart of an artist and fall in love with life again.  

 

He begins by stating that every human being is creative and calls for readers to make a personal revolution – to fight fears, mental blocks, and internal and external negativity. He gives ‘what if’ questions, examples, and exercises to release creativity. He writes of the power of curiosity, revitalization, tiny habits, intuitive expressions of feelings, and the power of poetry. 

 

The book is like retraining the imagination muscle! And overcoming the disease of boredom.

 

This is a practical, useful book to transform creative blockages into creative expression that reinvigorates the mind, body, and spirit. 









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MARTINA NICOLLS

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MARTINA NICOLLS  is an international aid and development consultant, and the author  of: The Paris Residences of James Joyce  (2020), Similar But Different in the Animal Kingdom (2017), The Shortness of Life: A Mongolian Lament (2015), Liberia’s Deadest Ends (2012), Bardot’s Comet (2011), Kashmir on a Knife-Edge (2010) and The Sudan Curse (2009).

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