I’ve noticed I make poor design decisions when I don’t listen to my gut. Either I’m too lazy to plough through the added iterations or I’m too proud to take a cue from someone who shouldn’t know what they’re talking about because they aren’t The Designer™.
In Luke 5:4-9, Simon is asked by Jesus to drop his nets on the other side of the boat. He responds, “Master, we toiled all night and took nothing! But at your word I will let down the nets.” For better or for worse, I read some sarcasm in his response. “Okay – if you say so, Master.” I think I read it that way because I tend to have a bitchy attitude about seemingly silly requests.
After the men haul in a huge load of fish, Simon falls on his knees saying, “Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord.” On reading this, I am ashamed. I think many times the “gut feeling” I have about a design is the Holy Spirit nudging me toward being better. That difficult client request, if nothing else, is a chance to ask God (The Designer) for help.
I’ve always thought about worship at work as a Tuesday morning Bible study or a (mostly) daily prayer time. Only now am I beginning to realize that God knows how to do my job infinitely better than I do. Not only can I come to him for help with my laziness and pride, I can ask him for help choosing colors, developing grid systems, solving interface problems, designing for accessibility, and the list goes on.
If I ask him for help, believing that he listens and trusting that he knows better than I do, I’m more aptly ready to praise him in the successes and run to him in the failures. In the end, I think that’s all that really matters.