Ívy Velazquez, 21
How often do you experience existential angst?
It comes in periods. Maybe one week, I've noticed that I'm very existential, where I’m questioning things nonstop, slowing down. Then the next week, just be super motivated, not thinking and just doing, creating and hustling more, and not being so existential. Not Saying that being existential is completely negative, but sometimes it can take you into a dark rabbit hole. So, I would say every other week– it comes in waves.
How do you navigate those feelings?
What keeps me going is my art/creating, the inspiration from my family's lineage, history, and journey of coming to the US from Mexico for a better life, and just appreciating the fun, small things in life that I cherish and romanticize. Then it’s just a matter of surviving; living under capitalism, we have to make money in order to survive, so it feels like I have no other choice but to keep going even when I wish I could pause. But then there'll be times when I get really unmotivated with my art and don’t have that spark/intention that I usually have with me or motivation to keep going. It may be an ADHD thing since I’m very forgetful and forget/lose my intentions a lot, or it can be an insecurity thing, making it feel pointless. It’s a “What is the point of this,” “I don’t want to be perceived,” and “Where am I going with this once I complete what I want, then what?” “Why am I even doing my art,” which I think is important [to confront and question]. That happens often subconsciously, and then the motivation fades away.
I'm learning more about myself, about cognitive behavioral thoughts, teaching me that your negative thoughts are not always true. Now I'm just trying to be more aware of my thoughts, seeing it from a third-person perspective. It's hard sometimes, and sometimes it's easy to believe, letting it alter and distort your reality and perspective on life, and then you forget your positive intentions and motivations, but I'd say just take a step back and look at where these thoughts are coming from and acknowledge that. I'm still learning and still have trouble with it, and I really don't have the perfect solution. It is difficult not to be so pessimistic, especially with all the crazy things happening in our world, but what I want is to have more optimism and keep that curiosity in me that my inner child holds. What helps me that I've noticed is going through my photos of memories of my experiences with my loved ones and my art, or going through my Ig story archives since I document the things that bring humor & moments that I cherish in life through that. I love documenting the small things and details I cherish/find interesting in life, so going through that brings me back to that self-love, reminding me of all the cool and fun things that I’ve been doing, all the amazing people that surround me and that have inspired me, and remembering that it’s a privilege to be from Los Angeles even though it can be crazy, especially growing up here. It’s a good reminder for me that you take control of how you create and perceive your life/human experience, and even if you start to get existential at times and feel things are really nothing and pointless, or not might as well just observe, enjoy, & have fun with it (if it’s pessimistic then express it through something you enjoy).
I get really anxious when I start overthinking. And I have pressure on me to the point where I get scattered thoughts and can't continue what I'm doing. There will be weeks where I'm super productive, and there'll be weeks where I'm existential, reflecting more. Now I'm learning to use that as inspiration for my art instead of having it boil me with anxiety– transmuting and expressing that energy, whether good or bad, into creating a lot of my artwork. I go into hibernation mode for a period of time and then creation mode. The art I’ve been doing lately has been for other people, it’s more structured, and I’m blessed and thankful for the opportunity, but I want to tap back into making art from that energy for myself because that’s when I find meaning through no meaning. I know a lot of artists feel the same way.