Skip to content
Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture

Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture

Arts and Culture

MELGUND-RECREATION-ARTS-AND-CULTURE
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • About
    • Board and Leadership
    • Books
    • Our Communities
      • Art Borups Corners Collective
      • Borups Corners
      • Dyment
    • Local Services Board of Melgund
  • News
    • Arts, Culture, and Community Innovation
    • Community Lens
    • Events
    • Growing Up in Dyment Video Series
    • Photos and Stories
    • Recipes
    • Research
  • Facilities
    • Cook Shack
    • Dyment Recreation Hall
    • Melgund Lake Ice Shack
    • The Pavilion
  • Programs
    • Easy EPUB Reader and Library
    • Games Nights
    • Melgund: Come Eat With Us Cookbook
    • Melgund History Database
    • The Arts Incubator
    • The Dyment Museum
    • Framework for Recreation in Canada
    • Winter Stories
  • Research
    • Digital Capacity Building: Winter Stories
    • ECO-STAR North
    • Emerging Practices in AI-Enabled Storytelling
    • Food Security and Agriculture
      • Melgund: Come Eat With Us Coolbook
      • Relationship Development and Engagement with the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and University of Minnesota Duluth
      • Towards a Framework for Northern Food Systems Innovation
    • Melgund Integrated Nuclear Impact Assessment Project
  • Exhibitions
    • 2026 Spring Exhibition
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • Motivation
  • The High Cost Of Playing It Safe
  • Motivation

The High Cost Of Playing It Safe

Making a bad piece of art is actually a massive win because you showed up for your values.
Jamie Bell 21 Jan 2026 4 minutes read
Background for The High Cost Of Playing It Safe

Embracing artistic risk to build creative resilience and community in Northwestern Ontario.

Playing it safe is actually the riskiest move an artist in Northern Ontario can make.

We’ve been conditioned to think that artistic risk means throwing our entire lives into a chaotic fire for a viral moment, but that’s just loud noise. Up here, where the landscape is vast and the population is sparse, the real risk is choosing to be seen exactly as you are without the safety of a trend. It’s scary to put out work that doesn’t look like the polished, hyper-processed stuff coming out of Toronto or New York. But when you lean into that discomfort, you’re practicing a form of mindfulness that anchors you to your own reality. You aren’t just making stuff; you’re building a relationship with the unknown.

Exposure therapy isn’t just for phobias; it’s a blueprint for creative growth. If the idea of trying a new medium or sharing a raw, unfinished poem makes your stomach flip, that’s your nervous system flagging an opportunity. Small risks are the move. You don’t have to quit your job to be a risk-taker. Instead, try one weird technique you think is “cringe” or reach out to a local arts collective in Thunder Bay or Kenora for a collab that feels slightly out of your league. These tiny acts of bravery retrain your brain to see failure as data rather than a verdict on your soul.

Most of us are stuck in a loop of completion anxiety, where we only value the end result. We think if the painting doesn’t hit or the grant doesn’t land, the time was wasted. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy reminds us that our values matter more than the outcome. If you value courage and curiosity, then making a bad piece of art is actually a massive win because you showed up for your values. In the North, where resources can feel thin, this mindset is your greatest asset. It turns the struggle into a playground.

Resilience isn’t about being bulletproof; it’s about being flexible. When you embrace artistic risk, you’re essentially doing yoga for your ego. You learn that you can survive a flop and that the world doesn’t end when a project goes sideways. This is how we build a healthy arts sector in rural spots. We need people who aren’t afraid to be messy. We need organizations that value the attempt as much as the gala. It’s about creating a vibe where not knowing what happens next is the whole point of the process.

So, let yourself be a bit of a disaster this week. Turn off the notifications, stop doomscrolling other people’s highlights, and make something that feels a little too honest or a little too strange. The goal isn’t to be perfect; the goal is to be present. When you stop protecting your reputation, you finally start finding your voice. That’s the real tea. It’s quiet, it’s grounded, and it’s where the actual magic happens in the middle of nowhere.

The High Cost Of Playing It Safe

Northwestern Ontario Arts, Culture and Recreation

Rooted in Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario we’re exploring arts, culture, and recreation programming that brings our communitiess together. From creative workshops and local exhibitions to youth activities and cultural events, we support rural artists, strengthen community connection, and celebrate the creative spirit of Northwestern Ontario.

Through community-based arts initiatives, recreation programming, and cultural gatherings, Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture fosters creative expression, collaboration, and long-term sustainability in the northern arts sector. Our work connects residents, empowers youth, and builds pride in local talent across rural Northwestern Ontario.

Learn more about our programs, events, and opportunities with Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture.

About the Author

Jamie Bell

Administrator

Visit Website View All Posts

Post navigation

Previous: Take the Mic and Run the Project
Next: Dark Skies and Quiet Nights at Risk?

Related News

0EA9855E-DAD8-4799-A921-464D55B409B1_1_105_c
  • Motivation

Art Is Not A Spectator Sport

Jamie Bell 16 Feb 2026
Explore Melgund Lake from the Dyment Boat Launch—ideal for boating, canoeing, kayaking, and fishing in Northwestern Ontario’s pristine wilderness.
  • Motivation

The Frontier Is Your Backyard

Jamie Bell 14 Feb 2026
summer-scorch-and-painted-histories.jpg
  • Motivation

If The Scene Is Dead You Are The Necromancer

Jamie Bell 13 Feb 2026

The Latest News

  • The Birdfolk Buskers Rock Dyment Hall
  • Community Warmth and Winter Tunes
  • Art Borups Corners in Action
  • Spiced Aztec Chocolate Rice Pudding
  • Zen Garden Matcha & Adzuki Rice Pudding
  • NWMO seeks Working Group Volunteers

You may have missed

Sean Merritt and Sara Fisher of The Birdfolk Buskers deliver a high-energy set to a packed house at Dyment Recreation Hall during the Family Day festivities.
  • Photos and Stories
  • Recreation

The Birdfolk Buskers Rock Dyment Hall

Melgund Recreation 15 Feb 2026
Community Fire and Feast - Dyment Recreation Hall
  • Photos and Stories
  • Recreation

Community Warmth and Winter Tunes

Melgund Recreation 15 Feb 2026
Using a custom AI-powered tool, we automatically collect, organize, and analyze hundreds of impact assessment submissions—turning scattered public comments into clear, actionable insights for the community in minutes.
  • Community Lens
  • Photos and Stories
  • Research

Art Borups Corners in Action

Melgund Recreation 9 Feb 2026
spiced-aztec-chocolate-rice-pudding.jpg
  • Desserts

Spiced Aztec Chocolate Rice Pudding

Melgund Come Eat With Us 7 Feb 2026

SUPPORTING COMMUNITY

Melgund Recreation, Arts and Culture is a non-profit arts and recreation services provider supporting programs in Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario. Business Number 741438436 RC0001.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program

NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO ARTS

Programming is made possible with funding from the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program. We gratefully acknowledge and thank them for their support.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program

COMMUNITY RECREATION

Recreation and community arts programs in Dyment and Borups Corners and Melgund Township are supported with funding from the Government of Ontario. We thank them for their support.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
Copyright © All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.