I guess I'll have to take Ms. Fancher's side of the discussion.
One doesn't be creative on a schedule. And real life tends to intrude on creative processes, and if you're doing x you can't be doing y.
As a corporate drone (mainframe computer programmer) for 25+ years, I made an awful lot of money not being creative. That was somebody else's job. Mine was to just convert the creative ideas into machine logic and correct the logical errors and go back to the creative types to sort out their logical inconsistencies. Making money and being creative are two different things.
Anybody can do the drudge work in life. Being able to do the creative stuff is a lot rarer.
|