Choosing Effort with an Artist’s Quiet Faith

Choose effort as an artist chooses a brush — with faith in the marks you will leave. — Paulo Coelho
Effort as a Deliberate Instrument
At the outset, Coelho’s injunction recasts effort not as burdensome grind but as a tool we elect to wield. Like an artist reaching for a sable brush instead of a bristle one, the act of choosing signals intention: we decide what kind of work will best serve the image we hope to bring forth. In The Alchemist (1988), Coelho’s shepherd advances by trusting small, purposeful acts; similarly, choosing effort is an expression of faith that today’s stroke contributes to a larger picture we can only partly see.
Choosing With Purpose, Not Panic
From there, the metaphor deepens: artists do not grab the nearest brush in fear; they select with purpose. Hokusai, who signed himself “Old Man Crazy to Paint” (c. 1834), experimented across decades to find the stroke that matched his vision. Likewise, Agnes Martin’s quiet grids—articulated in her Writings (1992)—show how restrained, consistent marks can evoke spaciousness. In our work, choosing effort means aligning the quality of exertion to the effect we intend, rather than flailing under pressure.
Faith in Process Amid Uncertainty
Yet, a chosen brush still meets an empty canvas. Here faith bridges the gap between intention and result. Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi’s Flow (1990) describes the absorption that comes when skill meets challenge, suggesting that trust grows as we keep moving our hand. Moreover, Carol Dweck’s growth mindset research (2006) shows how believing abilities can develop reframes mistakes as feedback. Thus the artist’s faith is not naive optimism; it is confidence that disciplined iteration will make the next mark wiser than the last.
The Ethics of the Marks We Leave
Consequently, the quote pushes beyond productivity toward responsibility. Marks remain—on canvases, communities, and colleagues. Michelangelo’s unfinished Prisoners, with their visible chisel tracks (c. 1525–1530), remind us that process leaves evidence. In civic terms, Antoni Gaudí’s Sagrada Família (begun 1882) demonstrates how intentional work can outlast its maker, shaping how others live and look. Choosing effort, then, is also choosing the kind of imprint we will accept as our legacy.
Evidence for Sustained, Skilled Effort
Moreover, research underscores that outcomes hinge on sustained, well-structured effort. Angela Duckworth’s Grit (2016) links long-term passion and perseverance with achievement, while Anders Ericsson’s Peak (2016) argues that deliberate practice—focused repetitions with feedback—produces expertise more reliably than talent alone. The lesson harmonizes with Coelho’s image: selecting the right ‘brush’ means designing the way we work, not merely working longer.
Making Today’s Stroke Count
Finally, the metaphor becomes practical. Artists think in sequences: underpainting, layers, varnish. Likewise, we can choose a manageable brush for today—a draft, a call, a prototype—and apply it with clean intention. Small, well-placed strokes compound; as James Clear’s Atomic Habits (2018) popularizes, tiny gains accumulate into visible change. By returning to the canvas daily with faith, we allow the picture to reveal itself—one deliberate mark at a time.