To create is to be.
As a creator, I impose my point of view upon the cosmos. The nature of creative activity is thus deeply personal, to the point of being sacred. To create is to dream and build and grow and fail and learn. Nothing trivial, this. Creativity draws on all past experiences and one’s lateral thinking to produce something completely new. If this is not allowed to manifest into something tangible, my dreams and vision have no meaning. I must realize my visions and its consequences, or there will be no new challenges to overcome, nothing new to learn and nothing new to be.
Creation craves ownership. States of approval and decisions-by-committee and constant compromises are third-party interruptions of my internal dialog that needs to come to its own conclusions. If I am not able own the product and be creative, then I am not able to do my work, and if I am not doing my work then I am ceasing to be me. This results with me juggling a sense of self-loathing with a sense of entitlement.
The act of creation transcends commercial enterprise. It is a means to self realization first and a road to wealth and power second. The very fact that I, and others like me, indulge in it within our homes outside the graces of our sponsors and without serious expectations of renumeration is testament to this.
To paraphrase Ayn Rand: I need the world so I may build. I do not build because I need the world.