If that were the case, I would've lost my creativity in my early teens. I was already too aware and too mature for my peers. Too "grown up". But I'm certain I still had something going on inside me creatively after that maturity set in. Continuing maturity has just focused my thinking over the decades and refined my language skills (which admittedly might be a bit of a roadblock since lyrics tend to demand simpler language).MackTuesday wrote:Maybe this is the cost of growing up if you aren't free to write/produce for a living. I haven't grown up yet and I refuse to.jacqueslacouth wrote:All I know is that there is no music in my head and their is bugger all inspiration for lyrics. (actually, not strictly true. I have a lot of rage about the state of the world that I want to scream about, but when I try to put down on paper it looks like REALLY bad teenage poetry)
"Growing up" doesn't necessarily require self-censorship or losing any sense of fun and creativity. I think plenty of creative people have grown up and not lost their way, artistically (and even improved). I think it's all nurture. What we learn from experiences shapes how we behave later. Did your life experience teach you that there are rewards for creativity or punishments?
In my case, definitely no rewards...