Little
Things Can Stop Creativity
No money can stop a creative project. No resources
can stop a creative project. No support can stop a creative
project. Yes major things or forces can stop creativity. Yet
when we look at the history of invention or in general the
history of new ideas we can discover that these major forces
truly do not stop the devoted, committed, dedicated creation
person.
No money, resources, support did not stop:
Ghandi
Mother Teresa
Charles Goodyear
Harriet Tubman (underground railroad during the Civil War)
Henry Ford
Chester Carlson (inventor of the Xerox process)
nor many others from the distant or recent
past.
One key difference for them was their determination.
Yes eventually money, resources and support came or was acquired.
They enabled the creative person to take their idea and turn
it into a larger and larger solution.
Yet the little things are what stop most of
us from utilizing our creativeness long before we get to tapping
the big resources for future giant success or breakthrough.
While reading Alexander Lockhart's book: POSITIVE
CHARGES, recently I came across the following item:
#79
Understand there is only a letter difference
between change and chance. It got my attention as another
small thing that often stops my creativeness or the creativeness
of others I know and work with.Being creative produces change.
Many to most people resist change or at least resist being
"changed". Being creative often requires that we
take a chance or chances. Being creative requires that we
venture into unknown territory and chance failure.
To be more creative we need to accept change
and chance and that with either the other will occur. If you
change something you take a chance of potential failure. If
you take a chance change will normally be the result. Examine
the changes your ideas will produce. Explore and test the
chances you will be taking. Do not change or chance stop you.
About a 18 months ago I had an aha that came
from another small difference. While teaching Fundamentals
of Marketing courses for the American Management Associations
one issue that I stressed, similar to many presenters, speakers,
and professors; was that as Americans we tend to be REACTIVE
rather than ACTIVE or better yet PROACTIVE. An emphasis and
purpose of marketing and marketing plans is to help people
take charge and be PROACTIVE.
Often becoming PROACTIVE requires many paradigm
shifts for individuals, departments and entire corporations
or even industries.
The "Aha" I had was a simple change.
Instead of being REACTIVE, simply rearrange one letter in
the word and become CREA TIVE or creative. I have always found
it much easier for people to be creative than for them to
change and stop being reactive to become proactive.
Still another simple change has to do to a
major barrier to success or creativeness. That is "limitation".
I can't be creative I can't draw. I can't
sing. I can't dance. I can't understand computer software.
I can't. I can't. I can't.
If you are a fan or reader of motivational
books you no doubt have read the quote always accredited to
Henry Ford....
"If you say you can or you say you can't,
in either case you will be right in the end" (paraphrased)
Making the philosophic choice could be a simple chance that
would greatly affect your creativeness.
That is not the simple change I am referring
to related to "limitation".
Look at the word "limitation". It
has 10 letters. 9 of the letters are the root cause why so
many people are not creative. The 9 letters spell "imitation".
Too often we copy, mimic, reproduce and do not think for ourselves
and create.
Still another simple change can be discovered
by examining the word "RECREATION". Back up in linguistic
history and respell the word as it would have been originally
spelled as a hyphenated word...
RE-CREATION
Re creation. Creating again.
Many highly creative people discover that
when they experience "a blank wall", "writer's
block", "creative staleness" or other forms
of creative blocks that if they simply stop and take time
to recreate they will then be able to re-create and re-tap
their creativeness and move on.
Graham Wallas referred to the space between
the second and third stages of his creative process as a good
time to relax and play or recreate. By doing this you allow
your subconscious to work on the challenge and provide you
an aha or enable you to be in a state that makes you open
to discovering an aha.
Oz Swallow in 1978 shared a simple change
that has major implications and effect on the creativeness
of people. One night as a group of 100 or more people crowded
into a small classroom at Buff State College during the Annual
CPSI meeting, Oz encouraged us to...
"Change the metaphors in your life."
He followed by explaining that all words in
all languages (nouns, adjectives, and adverbs used as adjectives
and possibly verbs) are metaphors. They are not the thing
or action but rather a word referring to your interpretation
of it. Therefore he suggested that we examine the words we
use. See them as metaphors. Then change our metaphors. Or
change our definitions.
An example I have used with students from
elementary school to college and with participants in workshops
of a range of ages was the one
"I Can't Draw"!
First we clearly defined the word draw as
making lines, shapes, marks, or shaded areas. In turn the
results could be used to represent existing or imaginery things.
Then we would redefine the act of drawing as the making of
lines, shapes, marks, or shaded areas with materials such
as pencils, pens, chalk, crayons, etc using our hands, feet,
arms, teeth, etc to hold them.
The simple change in this case is establishing
a realistic defintion and comparison. Most people tend to
compare themselves and their actions or skills with the "giants"
in the particular field such as art, music, dance, engineering,
etc.
To learn to draw is a simple act.
To learn to draw at the level of a major artist
is generally not.
Still one more simple change that can be discovered
by examining the word we use. Most to all of us have problems
with daily communication. The root cause for most of us is
poor listening, either on our part or the other person's.
The change. To improve your communication
listen. To better listen simply re-arrange the letters for
the answer.
listen becomes silent!
Therefore to improve your creativeness. .
.
1. Accept that being creative will produce
change and that simple change often will produce creativity.
2. Accept that creativity requires some chance.
Continually work at taking bigger and bigger chances. One
small step at a time.
3. Work at not reacting and instead work at
creating.
4. Work at reminding yourself over and over
"I Can, I Can, I Can" and ask "How Might I
or How Might We So That I Can or We Can?"
5. Stop imitating. Look for new ways for yourself.
Examine the principle or main idea behind successful creative
ideas and adapt them rather than simply adopting or imitating
them.
6. Take time to recreate: relax, play a game,
have fun at least for awhile.
7. Look for the metaphors that are stopping
you and change them or your definitions for them.
8. Take time to truly listen to others, yourself,
nature, your problems. Learn from Eero Saarinen, famous Finnish
and American architect...
"The solution lies within the problem.
Continue looking it will tell you."
Look for your own "small changes" that will release
and expand your creativity and creativness.
Being creative is your choice!
- Robert Alan Black, Ph.D. |