What happens when you give yourself more time than you need?
We’re used to squeezing meaning into tight containers: the 25-minute block, the quick sketch, the draft that has to be “good enough” on the first try. But when the clock loosens its grip, something in you does, too.
The urgency to prove, impress, or finish starts to thin out, and underneath it you might notice quieter impulses: the sentence that wants an extra line break, the color you keep returning to, the pause your body takes before it reaches for the next thing.
When you let the hour be bigger than the task, the work has room to wander. A simple outline might become a mind map. A grocery list might turn into a poem. A rough idea for a journal page might soften into a conversation with yourself.
This isn’t just for people who call themselves artists. It’s for anyone who arranges words, replants a garden bed, experiments with spices. All of that is creative work. And all of it changes when you’re no longer racing a deadline in your head.
The unhurried hour isn’t about productivity at all. It’s a chance to remember that your creativity—whatever form it takes—moves best when it’s not being chased.
Please note: This is a live-only gathering so we can be fully present together. No recordings.
Questions? Send me a message or review the FAQs here.
This gathering is offered on a sliding scale with a recommended minimum of $10. Please choose the amount that feels right for you.

