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Freedom Within Constraint

Freedom Within Constraint

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Igor Stravinsky once remarked, “The more constraints one imposes, the more one frees one’s self. And the arbitrariness of the constraint serves only to obtain precision of execution.” Stravinsky was known as one who would “push the boundaries of tolerance” for the listener of music in his time, so it is somewhat surprising to hear him say something like that. But when you think about it, it makes sense. But only if freedom is understood as the absence of limits. For Stravinsky, freedom did not mean having endless options at his disposal. Quite the contrary. Freedom was the capacity to act meaningfully within a defined field. Stravinsky was not merely offering a clever aphorism about creativity. He was describing a practical discipline of artistic work. The composer does not become more creative by standing before infinite possibility. He becomes more creative when he establishes — and sticks to — boundaries. Form, instrumentation, rhythmic structure, a tonal language. And then discovers what can be made within it. The constraint sharpens the act of creation. It removes ambiguity, and forces decision. This runs contrary to one of the modern fantasy about creativity, namely, that the creative person is most alive when he is most unrestricted. This idea is not without its romantic appeal. We imagine the writer, composer, entrepreneur, or performer as someone who breaks free from all forms and simply produces out of pure inward force. But alas, that’s a mere fantasy; it is not aligned with reality. Creativity does require a certain independence of mind, perhaps even a bit of rebellion against what is popular. But independence of mind is not the same thing as formlessness. An unlimited field produces not freedom, but paralysis. When everything is possible, nothing has priority. The blank page does not necessarily liberate the writer. More often, it exposes him to the burden of infinite choice.This is why serious creative work nearly always begins with some kind of narrowing. A writer chooses a subject. A composer chooses an ensemble. A researcher chooses a question. A business chooses a niche market. These initial decisions may feel restrictive, but they are actually essential to their success. Until the field is narrowed, the imagination has no object to engage. It can hover indefinitely in the realm of possibility, mistaking potential for progress.The point is not that every limitation is good. Some constraints are suffocating. Others are imposed by cowardice, bureaucracy, financial necessity, fear of risk (or success), or pure laziness. There are limits that diminish the work because they arise from a refusal to confront the real demand of the task. But here we’re speaking of a different kind of constraint. This constraint is not a cage. It is an instrument. The mind can stop wandering through abstractions and begin the real work with real potential.Music makes this especially clear. A composer who chooses to write for solo trumpet is immediately confronted with limits: range, tone, dynamics, and the physical realities of the instrument. And as an active trumpeter myself, I will tell you there are plenty of composers who are not the least bit familiar with those limitations, often with hilarious results.The same principle applies outside the arts. Academic writing, for example, depends heavily on constraint. The word-count maximum is more difficult to achieve than any minimum the professor may expect. The dissertation is not improved by being “about” everything. Its strength lies in narrowing its object of inquiry. A useful research question does not ask the writer to say something vaguely important about a large topic. It requires the writer to identify a specific problem, define terms, establish scope, choose a method, and submit the argument to evidence. In that sense, scholarly work is disciplined creativity. The form does not weaken the thought. The form tests the thought.This may explain why the most frustrating stage of any project is often not the work itself, but the period before the boundaries are clear. A vague project is exhausting because it requires constant renegotiation. What is this supposed to be? Who is it for? What belongs in it? What does not? What standard governs it? Without answers to those questions, even the most talented artists, academics, musicians, etc. waste enormous energy circling the work rather than engaging with it. Once the boundaries are set, however, a different kind of energy becomes available. The task is still difficult to be sure, but it is no longer ambiguous. It has real boundaries within which to work.There is also a moral dimension to this. A life without boundaries is not necessarily a free life. It may simply be an undisciplined one. To commit to a vocation, a marriage, a tradition, a craft, a faith, or a serious body of work is to accept limits. One cannot become excellent at everything. One cannot honor every possibility equally. ...
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