19 Feb 2008 02:03:20 | Shery Ma Belle Arrieta-Russ
We're born creative. However, this innate characteristic becomes
buried as we get older. Our logical left brain usually takes the
driver's seat. Here are 5 ways to help you unearth your creative
self.
1. Surprise Your Mind. List laughable, ridiculous, outrageous
and bizarre ideas. Don't limit yourself to ideas that other
people consider "sane," "reasonable" or "logical." The best and
most creative ideas stem from silly ones. When you're in a
creative mode, you're suspending judgment on ideas you generate.
You simply list them all down and never worry whether they make
sense or not. Allow yourself the freedom to think outside the
box.
2. Aim for Quantity. Generate loads of ideas for you to go
through later. It's normal that your first few ideas won’t
really be fresh. The gems will come out later so it’s important
to keep going. With a large list of ideas, you'll have more to
choose from, adapt or combine. Creativity is not coming up with
something new from nothing; creativity is the ability to create
something novel from ideas/things that already exist by
combining, improving or refining them.
3. Be Playful. A relaxed and playful attitude fosters
creativity. Those creative juices flow best when you're not
restrained by your logical, left brain. Toy with ideas and
forget about being too careful. Be a child again and play.
4. Believe that Everything has a Solution. An optimistic outlook
always leads to solutions, no matter how impossible a problem or
task may be. Often when a solution can't be found, all that's
needed is for the problem to be redefined. Or when you think
you're stumped, surprise your mind with silly solutions then
work backwards, leading to the original problem. Cultivate an
attitude of continuing search for solutions.
5. Let Go of Your Fear of Failure. Don't expect to do something
perfectly for the first time. Thomas Edison tried about 1800
things for the perfect filament for the incandescent lamp. Fear
of failure is one of the major factors that can hinder your
creativity. Instead of looking at failed attempts negatively,
look at your failures as learning opportunities. Failing isn't
fun, but neither is doing nothing.
Copyright © 2004 Shery Ma Belle Arrieta-Russ
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