Dwayne Walker asks whether it is enough to be true to yourself within your creativity and the world outside you.

His example is the great Bob Marley, who did the impossible.

Enjoy reading Dwayne Walker’s thoughts.

“One of the deepest tensions in living a creative life:

Is it enough to be true to yourself…

or must you also be true to the world?

An artist might paint their own torment or dreams.

But what about the artist who sees corruption in systems of power?

Who sees forests burning?

Who sees cruelty normalized?

Is personal authenticity enough?

Or is there a higher responsibility?

There are two kinds of truth a creator wrestles with:

Inner truth: your emotions, your wounds, your desires, your private revelations.

Witnessed truth: injustice, collapse, manipulation, suffering, power structures.

Some artists navigate the self.

Some expose the system.

The greatest often do both.

Think about Bob Marley.

We think of him as the ultimate symbol of relaxation. “Don’t worry about a thing.”

But that comfort is a misunderstanding.

Marley grew up in the concrete jungle of Trench Town. He witnessed police brutality, extreme poverty, and political violence that nearly took his life.

If he had focused only on his inner truth (his spiritual desire for love and unity) he might have just written hymns.

If he had focused only on the witnessed truth (the corruption and colonial oppression) he might have just shouted angry slogans.

Instead, he did the impossible.

He wrapped the hardest political revolutions in the sweetest melodies.

He made the world hum along and dance to songs about overthrowing governments.

He didn’t choose between being a mystic or a soldier.

He realized that the most dangerous weapon against the system wasn’t violence.

It was joy.

He turned a prayer into a protest.

And so when I wrestle with the question of if subjective authenticity is enough for an artist, I think the answer is: sometimes.

Sometimes yes.

Sometimes no.

If you are painting your inner grief honestly, that grief is not separate from the world.

Your anxiety was shaped by culture. Your heartbreak shaped by expectations. Your insecurity shaped by systems.

The “self” is never isolated from society.

But…

If you clearly see environmental collapse…

If you understand systemic exploitation…

If you recognize cruelty masquerading as normal…

And you choose silence because it’s safer?

That’s no longer authenticity.

That’s avoidance.

There’s a difference between not being called to something…

And being afraid to speak on something.

Creators must know the difference.

And let me be clear…

You are not obligated to be an activist.

But if you see something clearly, and that clarity burns inside you, then yes…

There is responsibility.

Because you are the only one witnessing your perspective on this world.

You’re the only one who can convey that message.

And your creativity is power.

So wield it.

If your inner truth demands you paint your depression…paint it.

If your clarity demands you expose corruption…expose it.

If your soul demands you reveal the cruelty people pretend not to see…reveal it.

The deeper question isn’t:

“Should I focus inward or outward?”

The real question is:

“What is most honest for me right now?”

Some seasons require introspection.

Some seasons require confrontation.

Your truth comes from the alignment between those two forces.

And Bob Marley, Basquiat, Ai Weiwei…you name it…

The most powerful creators do the extraordinary:

They somehow create from the fusion between both forces.

The work is both personal and political.

Both subjective and universal.

So I’ll leave you with this:

What personal truth lives inside that tension that would feel like a betrayal if you never created it?

That’s your responsibility.”

 

I like to take reflection time to answer Dwayne’s question and to realise my responsiblity. What do I owe the world?

Forest walking or bathing, taking a hike or plain walking on the beach or getting into the sunshine in the garden are ways I find time to reflect.

Enjoy whatever you are creating this week.

Pauline