Tag: curiosity

  • Paint, Pressure & Lilacs in a Jar

    Paint, Pressure & Lilacs in a Jar

    4–6 minutes

    There’s something slightly humbling about willingly signing up to do something you’re not naturally good at. And for me, that thing is painting.

    Paint It Easy Studio – Bederstrasse 94, 8002 Zürich

    I’ve never really been “the creative one.” I like things to look good, but I also like knowing how to make them look good. So, sitting in front of a blank canvas, hoping for the best? Slightly stressful.

    But I had this thought:
    I can’t really have flowers at home (my cat would absolutely destroy them and probably poison herself in the process)… so why not paint some instead?


    I walked into the studio expecting something a bit… quiet. Focused. Almost intimidating. Instead, there was a bar?

    People chatting, music playing, everyone casually painting like they’ve done this before. It felt more like an apéro than a class just with canvases.

    Everything was already set up: brushes, paints, palette, and right in front of me – a blank canvas, plus the “ideal version” of what we were about to paint: Lilacs in a jar.

    So basically: here’s what it should look like…


    At first, I felt fine.

    We started by tracing the outlines, which already felt like a safe start, and I thought: okay, I can do this. This is manageable. Then the painting actually started.

    Background first – soft yellows into white, blending into blue. Very calm, very aesthetic… until I realised everyone around me was moving much faster.

    And I was still… thinking.

    Mixing colours. Re-checking. Trying to make it “perfect.” Classic.


    At some point, I looked around.

    Everyone was already working on their flowers. Meanwhile, I was still somewhere between “this might look good” and “why am I still on step two?”

    That was probably the most frustrating part.

    Not because I didn’t understand, but because I wanted to do it right. And doing it “right” was slowing me down.


    The teacher, Jeanette, was walking around, checking everyone’s work, switching effortlessly between German and English, making the whole room feel relaxed and inclusive.

    She hadn’t said anything to me yet. Which obviously made me think:
    Okay… am I doing something wrong?

    Then she finally came over, looked at my canvas – and just went:

    “Oh wow, this is really pretty.”

    And suddenly… everything shifted.

    Because yes, I was slow. But what I was doing was somehow working.


    Somewhere between painting the lilacs (with a brush… and later a sponge – I was the only one who took it, by the way) and adding the final details, I realised something:

    It was never going to look exactly like the reference picture. And that was fine. Actually, that was the whole point.

    Some people were following every step. Others were completely improvising. And somehow, everything still worked.

    That’s when it clicked.

    Creativity isn’t about getting it right.
    It’s about letting something take shape – even if it’s not what you expected.


    Everyone eventually finished, walked around, looked at each other’s paintings.

    Meanwhile, I was still there.

    Adding details. Asking questions. Fixing tiny things no one else probably noticed.

    Very on brand. But honestly? That’s when it got even better.

    It became less about “keeping up” and more about making it mine.


    I’ll be honest, during the workshop, I was hard on myself.

    But when I got home and looked at it again?

    It was actually… really nice. Not perfect. Not identical to the reference.

    But mine. Which, for me, is already a win.


    This workshop made me realise that creativity isn’t something you either “have” or don’t. It’s something you allow.

    You can be slow. You can overthink. You can even doubt everything you’re doing halfway through.

    And still end up creating something beautiful.


    100% !!!

    This is one of those things that works in almost any context:

    • a date (honestly, such a good one)
    • after-work with colleagues
    • a random Saturday when you don’t know what to do
    • or even alone, if you feel like trying something new without overthinking it

    And the best part? You leave with something you made.

    Not just an experience – something you can actually keep.

    Which, in my case, might be the only “flowers” that survive in my apartment.


    At some point, you stop reading about things and actually go do one.

    Not because you’re “good” at painting.
    Not because you’re suddenly trying to become creative.

    But just to see what happens when you sit down, pick up a brush, and don’t overthink it for once.

    If you’d like to see a video about my personal experience, come check out my instagram.

    👉 Book your own workshop


    And if you do… I’d love to know what you end up creating.

    If you’re not sure this one is for you, explore the rest of the list it’s full of creative ideas you can actually try.

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  • The Side Quest Manifesto: A Simple Rule for a More Interesting Life

    The Side Quest Manifesto: A Simple Rule for a More Interesting Life

    5–7 minutes

    We didn’t lose our curiosity. We traded it for comfort.

    A manifesto is meant to be simple and obvious, just like our daily routines. Google Maps tells me where to go, algorithms decide what I should watch, what I should listen to, what I should like. My days are efficient, predictable, optimized to the point where I barely have to think.

    And honestly, that should feel great, but it doesn’t.

    Because the more convenient life gets, the less I question anything. Same choices, same patterns. It starts to feel like I’m not deciding anymore, I’m just repeating yesterday.

    But comfort has a side effect. It kills curiosity. Not all at once. It just slowly takes over. You stop trying new things, not because you made a decision, but because routine quietly makes it for you. Days blur into each other. Everything feels familiar, but not in a good way, more like… nothing stands out. Decisions become automated. Exploration fades, slowly cascading by.

    This blog exists to challenge that.


    A reminder worth keeping

    Curiosity does not always require a grand adventure. Sometimes it begins with a small interruption to routine.


    The Idea

    Before I Get Too Comfortable is built on a simple idea:

    Not something extreme. Not something impressive. Just something different enough to break the pattern.

    Yes to trying something new. Yes to going somewhere unfamiliar. Yes to doing something you might be bad at, awkward at, or completely clueless about. Yes to the small idea that pops into your head and immediately gets shut down because it feels inconvenient.

    That tiny moment, that hesitation, that’s where the fire starts.

    Because I’m not doing this to become amazing at everything. I’m not trying to master ten hobbies or reinvent myself every week. I just don’t want life to feel like a loop where I forgot to exist. I want to encourage people to push further than what we live, to seek more life.


    Another reminder

    And here’s the truth, adventure is not what we think it is.

    Jucker Farm – Dorfstrasse 23 ⋅ CH-8607 Seegräben

    It’s not always aesthetic. It’s not always exciting. Most of the time, it’s small. Stupidly small. Saying yes when everything in you says stay in, stay safe, stay comfortable.

    But those small decisions hit harder than you think.

    They wake you up.


    Here’s How This Plays Out

    This blog follows the small moments.

    The ones that are easy to ignore. The ones that don’t look like much at first, but somehow end up feeling different. A random detour. A decision that didn’t need to happen, but did anyway.

    It’s about interruption.

    About catching yourself in the middle of a routine and deciding, just for once, not to follow it all the way through. Each side quest is just that. A small, deliberate choice to step outside the box, try something unfamiliar.

    Some of these experiments will be short. Some will be longer. Most of them will probably be random. But that’s not the point.

    The point is the decision behind it.

    Because nothing really changes until YOU decide to say yes.


    Why This Project Matters

    Freetown Christiania – Copenhagen, Denmark

    Because most people don’t miss opportunities. They hesitate through them. Not in a dramatic, obvious way. In small, forgettable moments, the kind you barely register. The plan you postpone, the posts you saved. The “I’ll do it another time” that quietly disappears. And nothing happens.

    Not because life got in the way. Just because you didn’t act when it showed up. Not deciding is also a decision.

    And the problem is, you don’t notice it while it’s happening. You only notice it later, when something feels off and you can’t explain why.

    This project is about catching that moment earlier.

    Right when hesitation shows up. Right when something feels slightly uncomfortable, slightly inconvenient, slightly out of place, and choosing it anyway.

    Because the difference between a life that feels lived and one that feels repeated is often just that. A small decision, made at the right moment.

    And most people skip it.


    The Side Quest Framework

    Curiosity doesn’t show up when it’s convenient. It shows up at the worst times. When you’re busy. When you’re tired. When it would be so much easier to ignore it and stick to what you already planned.

    This project turns those moments into side quests. Each path interrupts routine in its own way :

    Some challenge the body. Some challenge creativity. Others challenge hesitation :
    • Putting myself in unfamiliar situations and rediscovering what it feels like to be a beginner again.
    • Sometimes I’ll lean towards creativity, to remember ways of when we used to be younger.
    • Some quests will challenge me to step outside familiar social circles, interacting with strangers, new environments, or conversations that routine would normally filter out.
    • And sometimes the quest will simply be about getting lost on purpose. Visiting places that exist around but remain invisible because routine has made us stop noticing them

    There’s no strict structure behind this. No schedule, no system to optimize, no checklist to complete. Curiosity doesn’t follow rules, so neither will we.

    Some ideas will come out of thin air. Some will feel random. Some will probably make no sense at all.

    This isn’t about doing things right. It’s about staying open long enough to see what happens when you stop filtering everything through comfort and start following curiosity instead.


    The Invitation

    The mission of this project is simple.

    Exploration isn’t far away. It’s not expensive. It’s not waiting for the “right moment.” It’s right there.

    In the decision you keep skipping. The one that feels slightly inconvenient. Slightly uncomfortable. Slightly unnecessary.

    The one you almost say no to without thinking.

    So if you ever feel stuck in repetition, No plan. No pressure. No idea where this is going. That’s kind of the point. Because the best things don’t start when everything makes sense.

    consider this an invitation.

    Tag along.

    Let curiosity take the lead for a moment. because not knowing the ETA is better than counting down when you will reach your destination

    Because sometimes the most interesting stories begin with a very simple sentence:


    The Rule

    And that brings us to the rule of this project. Just like my cat, If something sparks curiosity, the answer is YES.

    Bianca – My cat

    Consider this your official permission slip to break your routine.

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