Show Your Work

Book Highlights
Show Your Work
— Austin Kleon

Key ideas on creativity, identity, sharing your work, and surviving criticism.

01
Beginner’s Mind & Creativity

Expertise can quietly become a cage. The more you know, the harder it gets to see possibilities you haven’t already dismissed. Staying in the beginner’s mindset — open, curious, unguarded — is itself a creative skill.

On Storytelling

“‘The cat sat on a mat’ is not a story. ‘The cat sat on the dog’s mat’ is a story.”

Tension is what makes something a story. Without conflict — however small — there’s nothing to follow.


02
Identity & Your Work

How you label yourself matters more than you think. Hedging with words like “aspiring” keeps you perpetually in the waiting room — as if the work you’re already doing doesn’t count.

“Your work is something you do, not who you are.”

“Whatever we say, we’re always talking about ourselves.”


03
Sharing Freely

Hoarding what you know doesn’t protect it — it kills it. Sharing is not just generosity; it’s how ideas survive and how you find the people who think like you.

“Part of the act of creating is in discovering your own kind. They are everywhere. But don’t look for them in the wrong places.”


04
Handling Criticism

Putting work into the world means opening yourself to all kinds of responses. The ones who handle it best aren’t those who stop feeling it — they’re the ones who’ve decided in advance what it means.

On nasty comments: “If someone took a dump in your living room, you wouldn’t let it sit there, would you?” Nasty comments are the same — they should be scooped up and thrown in the trash.

“Compulsive avoidance of embarrassment is a form of suicide.”

“When you put your work out into the world, you have to be ready for the good, the bad, and the ugly.”

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