Why Talent Is Overrated: The Real Key to Achieving Greatness

20 comments
process photo of sketch of two doves with drips of yellow and black ink by artist elli milan

I was 15 years old and finally coming out of my punk stage. My shaved head had grown into a short bob, and I was beginning to think about my future. My dad was pressuring me to attend the same university he went to and become a veterinarian. I liked animals alright, but I was really looking for something more creative and unconventional. I was one of the best writers in my school, with a deep love for history, languages, poetry, and analyzing literature. I was pretty good at a lot of things but not great at anything. I wanted to be talented but realized I was born with nothing that would set me apart.

Tapping Into the Power of the Right Brain

My soul soared at the idea that greatness lives inside of me. I daydreamed about changing the world and being famous. I wanted to be like Gandhi, Harriet Tubman, and Superman. I wanted my life to count. I prayed and asked God to give me a talent.

Less than two weeks later, we had a visitor in my 9th-grade art class. Her name was Betty Edwards, and she was there to promote her book, "Drawing from the Right Side of the Brain." For three days, she taught our class all about the right brain and its role in fostering creative and abstract thinking. She taught us to tap into our spatial perception and see the shapes that form makes. We learned to disassociate from our left brain language function that turns everything visual into a simplified symbol, leading us to draw in a linear and cartoonish manner rather than capturing what we actually see.

Challenging My Parent’s Beliefs

Sketchbook portrait painting of a man by artist elli milan

Everything changed for me at that point. My right brain lit up, and suddenly I could see! I was able to draw and see proportions and relationships. I lost myself in hours and hours of sketching in right brain land. My parents could hardly believe I was creating the drawings I was making and insisted that I was bringing them home from a friend in school. My mother, particularly, didn't believe me and tore a black and white photo of a musician out of the magazine she was reading and said, "Go draw this right now if you are telling the truth."

I jumped at the opportunity to prove my mother wrong and went to my room to draw. 2 hours later, I came out and showed her my work. She was astounded and said, "I had no idea you had this talent!"

I explained to her, "No, Mom, it's not talent! I just learned how to use my right brain! You could do it too! I can teach you how." She said that was nonsense, insisting I was talented and probably inherited it from my grandmother.

"Mom, I don't think so. Grandma isn’t very good at all and just paints sheep in the field and they look like cartoons. She's not using her right brain."

I couldn't convince my mom that I wasn't inherently talented. I think she wanted to believe that her daughter was some kind of genius with rare talent or had the ability to do something no one could explain. She wanted an excuse for why she couldn't draw, sing, dance, or do anything creative. She was good at math and accounting, but that was her box, and she wanted to stay in it. It's safe in there.

Passion as the Driving Force 

I knew better, though. I just lived it out. When I saw that I could improve my drawing skills with practice, measurement, and focused attention, I knew that learning was the key and I wanted to learn. The other kids in my class all learned to draw too, but the difference was passion. When the desire to be great at something collided with the right teaching, I became insatiably passionate.

My passion drove me to practice and draw every single day. Then I picked up painting and applied the same principles. I asked my parents for art classes and spent the summer learning how to paint. I insisted on attending art school so I could learn more. Because I was so passionate, I constantly went above and beyond the requirements, always seeking to push myself by choosing difficult subjects. I painted additional paintings outside of my assignments because I just couldn't get enough. I had found my "thing." I determined that this is what I would eventually be great at. I knew if I practiced enough and spent enough time painting, I would improve and continue to improve until I achieved greatness.

Talent is Overrated. Passion is Key

flat lay of a variety of sketchbook paintings by artist elli milan

Talent is overrated, misunderstood, and often misdiagnosed. The world clamors for talent. The art industry wants the world to believe artists are just born with an innate ability and you either have it or you don't. If anyone can learn it, then it ceases to be rare and cannot be sold for fortunes. The art world and art schools can't leverage our pride for big elitist degrees from private institutions.

The truth is that we all have access to the same information, and each of us can unleash the creative potential of our right brain, building up our creative muscle. We were designed by the Creator to be creative. We were created with greatness inside of us and the ability to grow, improve, and reach levels of Mastery in anything we love to do. Anyone can be an artist and create poetic, beautiful things.

Passion is a key ingredient, and talent is not.

Share your thoughts in the comments below! 


20 comments


  • June Lizotte

    Passion is definitely key! Because of the process of submitting myself to the love of all things creative, I’ve emmerced myself in a journey through art and ministry of creativity encouraging others. I never considered attending an art school as an endeavor to be undertaken because there was so much I could learn as a self-directed student with passion and drive. I learned so much by trial and error and because of the drive to create, and by responding to a calling toward prophetic creativity, I’ve enjoyed years of incredible experiences as an artist, and encouraging others to dive in. Selling art people appreciated was a bonus! Now, I’m enjoying the instruction through MAI because its presented at a flexible pace I can handle. Thanks for that!! And I am adding all these traditional mastery techniques and additional unique elements of art into my tool belt. I love it! Even though I’ve not been able to keep the pace of 6-8 hours a day (due to life responsibilities and other business and art related commitments) I know MAI is fueling my passion even more! I love the connections, challenges and encouragement here that keep me learning more. I look forward to “building the business” aspect of being able to really take it to the next level professionally.


  • Kelli Rae Hurst

    I can so identify with your story, though my creative journey unfortunately didn’t start until much later in life. But I foster those same feelings of wanting my life to count, knowing there’s greatness in there somewhere. I don’t know if art is part of it. It’s come with so many obstacles. But I’m determined to see it to its zenith.
    Thank you so much for sharing. I’ve only recently started following but really resonate and feel inspired by what I’m seeing.


  • Margaret Gajus

    Kochana Elle, jestem bardzo wdzięczna za Twoje wypowiedzi❤️


  • Noel Veiga Coutinho

    Thank you for this gem. With these small life lessons you have show that art is life and life is art. You are showing thr world how to break free. You say you want to change the world. What you are doing is changing 7.8 billion world’s. Thank you so much!


  • Noel Veiga Coutinho

    Thank you for this gem. With these small life lessons you have show that art is life and life is art. You are showing thr world how to break free. You say you want to change the world. What you are doing is changing 7.8 billion world’s. Thank you so much!


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