The Doubts That Almost Held Me Back—And How I Overcame Them

29 comments
Blank white paper on a desk with a paintbrush

I’m sitting at my desk in my studio and have nothing I need to paint. I have no orders and no invoices to create. Right now there is a huge crate on its way back from New York City, packed full of paintings that I didn't sell. I probably have close to 200 paintings on canvas and paper that all need homes. Art Expo was a giant flop. I got out of there by the skin of my teeth, barely breaking even on my investment. I feel fortunate that I even did that much.

But now I don't really have an art business anymore. Art Expo was supposed to open new doors for me. I was going to connect with industry leaders and have a whole new list of people to do business with. But instead I got blacklisted, and not only did I not get any new business, but anyone that used to sell my art won't work with me anymore.

So I have to reinvent myself and figure out how to sell art from the beginning. I’m full of self-doubt and wonder if I am even a real artist. All the words of past dealers swim in my head on repeat: You artists are only as good as the people who buy your work. If it wasn't for us finding you people willing to buy, you couldn't make it. You are lucky we are willing to sell your work for you, or else you would starve.

The Work of Starting Over

A van-load of Elli and John's artwork

I know that I need to apply to galleries and find new representation. I know I need to contact new licensing agents and get new contracts. I know I have to pull it together, or we really won't be able to eat. I’m just so full of doubt and afraid that it's over. Maybe the last 10 years have just been a big fluke, and I was only lucky. Lucky to find a few dealers who were willing to sell my art for me, but they can easily sell another artist who is better.

I’m fumbling around the internet looking for new galleries anywhere in the United States that might have an art market. I have this stupid Mac on my desk that I still can't figure out how to use. My brother told me several months ago I wasn't a real artist unless I used a Mac. So I followed his advice when my last PC crashed and have regretted it. It's a whole new operating system and I’m way out of my comfort zone.

As I think about contacting a whole bunch of new galleries and showing them our art, I feel like a big phony and like my art isn't good enough. I wonder if there is even any point. I decide, like a robot, I will systematically find 100 galleries that seem to fit our market, send each of them examples of our art, and hope at least five of them will get back to me. Just finding 100 galleries might take me a solid week of non-stop scouring of the internet. But I have to do it. At least all of the rejection will take place in email, so I don't have to face it and I can cry alone in peace.

The Artist's Rollercoaster

Elli's colorful palette in use, with a painting in the background

In my 30 years as a professional artist and business owner, I have faced more self-doubt and unbelief than I can count. It is a constant battle. If I'm not doubting myself in terms of skill, then I am doubting how original I am or fearing that I’m not creative enough. If I feel okay about my art, then I struggle with doubting my decisions as a business owner and wonder if I will ever build things to the level of my vision. I start to wonder if my vision even achievable.

Even after all of this self-doubt, I still have more. I doubt that people like me and worry about being awkward and saying dumb things at the wrong time, or what I mean to say not coming out right and facing the embarrassment. I have struggled with belief in myself many times over the years. It has taken on many forms and come in many different packages. Failures and setbacks have magnified the doubts to a point where I feel like I could be forever broken.

Being an artist can feel like a giant emotional rollercoaster where someone says something rude about your art and you feel shredded, and then a few days later you make the biggest sale of your life and you are back on top again, only to lose confidence again when something doesn’t go your way.

It’s exhausting. Debilitating. Heart wrenching. Why do we take it all so personally? Why can making a bad painting make us cry like a kindergartener?

Enough Is Enough

Elli clasps her hands and smiles while teaching a workshop

At some point, I finally got sick of it. I got tired of the doubts, negative self-talk, and hinging my success on what other people think. I got tired of the opinions of “they” shaping my mood or productivity or decisions. I didn't want to care what other people thought anymore. I didn't want circumstances, setbacks, or low points to steal my life from me or rob me of what I am capable of. I had to get past this. I had to grow up.

I had to get spiritually strong. I determined that I would journal every day and listen to what God says. I would write down every word, impression, vision, idea, or thought that comes from God. I kept a journal on my Mac desktop in Pages, a new program I was trying to learn. I would write power statements, affirmations, and visuals of what success looked like that week. I would fight for every moment of positivity and hope I could get.

I would prophesy to myself that I was born for this! I have a mandate on my life to build an art movement that would bring heaven to earth and restore Beauty in the arts. I had all that I need and the storehouses of heaven were open to me. That God had heaps and heaps of blessings for me. Art buyers are lined up waiting for my next painting and I have endless streams of creativity. Nothing could take me out because God was with me and this was HIS dream.

I focused on what God was doing and starved negativity. I disallowed a single negative thought to enter my mind, and when doubt came, even as a shadow, I delved deep into my vision and re-read my journal pages until I felt renewed again.

Every failure and setback was just a learning opportunity for how I could do better. Every door that shut in front of me was not my door. Every “no” meant that a “yes” was in the near future. I fed my dreams and starved my doubts.

Building Belief

Elli poses with the brothers of Dimitrios Jewelry holding a piece of artwork they bought

Over time, I slowly changed my friends and the books I read. I stopped watching movies and wasting time on anything unimportant. All of these changes built my confidence and made me feel more successful, and successes followed consistently. I still failed occasionally and made a few bad decisions and got mixed up with the wrong crowd, but I also had some big successes and worked with some incredible people.

I found that as long as I entertained self-doubt and put up with it in my life, I wouldn't take risks. I didn't have the confidence to try new things or stretch myself for bigger goals.

It took six months of consistent work, but John and I got our work into 14 galleries from the 100 I contacted. Some of the galleries never sold a painting, and some sold art almost every week. We got out of our pit after Art Expo and began working directly with galleries building a network that was reliable and fulfilling.

The most rewarding part was not feeling that sickening darkness of self-doubt anymore. A new freedom came with it. I felt free to dream big and allow hope to soar. I possessed the belief to even speak out my dreams and declare them with confidence and sureness.

And it all started that day in the studio, staring down the screen of my mysterious Mac and deciding to face the unknown—to take one step after another regardless of how I felt. I had to learn that sometimes belief comes after you take action, not before. And the more we take action without needing to feel sure of ourselves, the quicker we will see success and feel our confidence grow.


29 comments


  • Jacqueline Te Huia

    Thank you so much for sharing your journey of facing insurmountable challenges. The do or die, sink or swim moments full of potential or possible despair. 5 years ago I was terminated from my job due to mandates. Coming away from 9-5 administrative work was disruptive yet freed me. Lived simply. Drew closer to the Lord. 2 years ago God asked me to attend community art workshops. An art funder encouraged us to hold exhibitions. That night God gave me a vision to hold my first exhibition. Entitled ‘Te Waka O Te Atua’ ‘The Canoe of God’ a journey of discovering the treasures God has gifted us in our cultural heritages. Other artists joined the exhibition. A chance to thank our Creator who gifted us those cultural treasures. Was so thankful I attended a couple of your online workshops that greatly improved my art & swiftness to produce. God often gives prophetic assignments that seem to be beyond what’s possible. As my daughters saw my paintings they wanted them so my major pieces weren’t for sale. I only sold 3 puoro Māori clay flutes for $45. God had me gift 2 art pieces away. My art career didn’t go off with a huge financial bang but it was a maiden voyage of discovery and many encountered Him in the Art , Music, Sculptures, Soundscapes , Video and Hula dance. A 40 year old dream. I struggled to complete a couple of portraits and got quite burnt out. I’ve recently struggled to start again but He has encouraged me to get back up and go again. Thank you for encouraging us all to never give up and the Faith journey is our anchor in the storms of self doubt and challenges. Eli you are shining God’s Light, like a lighthouse leading us all into safe harbours in Him! Love your heart, witness and all you are in Him. Abundant Blessings from Aotearoa New Zealand. Arohanui Jacqueline 👑📜💝
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Wow! I can tell you have so much to offer the world with your art and your unique way of seeing everything. Keep going!!


  • IRMI

    Elli, every time I read your articles or watch videos from you, you touch my heart deeply and make me cry.
    You make me believe that me too will be great in my own way!
    Thank you for your strength, determination and inspiration 🙏❤️
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    That’s wonderful to hear! I’m so glad it touches you!


  • Karen Lynn

    I really loved your message of inspiration Elli. Your courage and creation of truly bringing heaven to earth.
    The last paragraph is particularly pertinent, eliminating self doubt after taking action and not waiting or wanting to be sure, especially resonates.
    Blessings and deep appreciation for sharing the road you have travelled.
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    I’m so glad this helped you!


  • Gill Lyon

    Thank you so much Elli. I love your writing, this piece in particular. I quit my job 5 years ago to ‘do art’ I’m 45 & feel like I’m starting over. I have a big exhibition this year that I don’t feel ready for. Some days I look at my work & feel ok about it. Some bits I like. Other days I think ‘What am I doing? I’ll be a laughing stock!’ I feel like Everything hinges on this one event – new buyers, new doors, new contacts and it has been so expensive. But then I think – just relax. It’s just another event, it’s just one part of the process, enjoy it. One thing is for sure, if I hadn’t signed up for it & put myself under this pressure, I wouldn’t have been working so hard to improve my painting, I’d have been doing the same work at the same events & just scraping by. I felt the pull to do something radical. Navigating the art world while feeling like an outsider has definitely been a rollercoaster. I found Milan Art just as I was making the decision to apply to this exhibition and I feel like it was divine timing. The lessons have helped me so much. I still have days where I compare my work to others and I lose confidence in my own ability, thinking mine is not realistic enough or not expressive enough or just ‘not enough’ I think it’s because I don’t yet have a process or style that I feel is truly 100% me. So, I’m working towards beginning the mastery programme in September once my summer markets are done. That was a very long answer but I connected with this blog article so deeply. I’ve put myself under so much pressure this year and yeah I do feel sensitive about the reaction from all the people I’m going to meet, plus the need to make a living. It’s so easy to swing from excitement to fear to gratitude to crushing disappointment back to passion & clarity, all the way back to self doubt.
    So thank you for all of the Milan Art content, it has truly lightened my journey and given me strength in times of uncertainty. I can’t wait to begin the mastery programme.
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Love this!! You will do your very best and the rest is out of your control. Whatever happens don’t let it discourage you. Take what happens and learn what went right and what could be better. The mp in September will most definitely get you the rest of the way. You WILL find your style and master it! Plus learn how to build your business! I’m excited for you! I hope your shows go well!


  • Christine

    Reading this blog felt like a mirror being held up to my soul. It brought to the surface emotions I’ve carried quietly for too long—this lingering feeling that I’m an imposter, that somehow I’ve slipped into the art world unnoticed and might be found out at any moment. I’ve second-guessed the sincerity of my motives and even questioned whether my creative desires were truly valid—or just a hidden cry for approval.

    But your words reminded me that doubt doesn’t disqualify us—it simply invites us to choose belief. I’m in the midst of a major life transition, preparing to move across the world and stepping more fully into the call I believe God placed on my life: to create art that carries light, beauty, and truth. I’m painting from a space that reflects thresholds, spiritual birth, breath, and mystery—each piece a conversation between my soul and my Creator.

    This blog felt like a holy interruption. A divine reminder that the same God who gave me this passion is the One who will sustain it. I no longer want to shrink beneath the weight of doubt or the fear of what others think. I’m ready to step forward boldly, trusting that if God planted this dream in me, He will make room for it to bloom.

    Thank you for your vulnerability. It gave me permission to stand tall, create with joy, and finally trust that I am enough—because the One who made me says I am. Much love Chris 🥰
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    This is fantastic!! You should print out your response here and read it daily! It’s a profound power statement! I love what you write here. It’s true, light and beauty!! Esp. Doubts don’t disqualify us, only invite us to believe!!!


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