I feel like, most hobbies or such, are mainly something purely genetic, and not hard work. even drawing, aiming, writing, singing, and in general almost every hobby, requires you to have a good growth/childhood to actually be above average at
am i just coping, or some of you also think this is true?
I've been drawing for a while, and im not going to say I'm terrible, but I'm also really...not that good, and it feels like I'm limited due to my brain, not even my actual skills.
idk, the creative urge is the best thing about humanity imho. Without it I'd have been dead decades ago.
Creativity manifests in various forms - drawing, cookery, music, abstract painting, poetry, even sports.
There's also a difference between what you (the artist) is satisfied by and what others/society perceives as 'good'. Too much art now is only seen as 'good' if it makes money, or gets profile (towards making money). To measure humanity's creativity by humanity's greatest idiocy is... well... idiotic.
The essential part is how the artist perceives their own work. Their practice to achieve the work. And the work's intention.
Imho its sometimes possible to put a spiritual power into a work (aura?) - an energy which can be received by the viewer, listener, audience.
The forgotten dimension is time. Not necessarily the time it takes to create, but definitely the time it takes to consider, whether artist or audience.
The digital age is all about efficiency, less time, less consideration, which makes it all more superficial. That spiritual power struggles to exist.
Anyway, sorry for all the philosophy!
What I was going to say is....
You don't have to have any good childhood/growth to be creative. In fact, most really great artists, have had very difficult histories and MH issues.
Drawing is very difficult - you've picked a tough one. Its precise as well as artistic. Like sculpture.
Perhaps try creating in other mediums - painting, abstracts, poetry, things that are less demanding in their perfection. More expressive.
Playing music is easier than drawing. Many instruments can be rewarding very quickly. And they will grow with you. And never let you down.
I play music, and I'm not that good, but sometimes I am, it is a spiritual thing. And those times make it worth it.
And writing. And reading. You have to do those to be fully human. Live many lives not just one. I think you mentioned fantasy writers in a previous post. I know this is clliche, but George Martin can write. Nothing I've read by him has been bad. China Mieville Perdido St Station trilogy too is exceptional.
Whatever you do, just keep creating but, as a creative, don't limit yourself to one practice and get frustrated with it. Mix it up. Try some new directions.
Take care.