Obstacles
to creativity
- Being
too busy and getting too involved with a problem
-Having conflicting goals and objectives
-Not allowing yourself enough time to relax
Competition
in the present environment can hamper motives for creative
output. Concerns with job advancement or opportunities as
opposed to job stability or security may affect motives
to be creative at work.
Also,
business corporations have found that the creativeness of
their employees are promoted when the structure of their
organization is less hierarchical and more democratic and
free flowing.
The
clearest example of environmental influence is when one
is creative in virtue of serendipity. These are instances
when the environment facilitates creativity by affording
stimulating observations. One study suggested that cues
in the environment while completing one task can facilitate
insight on a later task, without the subject's awareness.
Moreover, there has been many historical accounts that claim
the Zeitgeist or cohort at a particular point in time have
influenced events.
Most
of the obstacles to creativity can be found within you.
*
Fear of criticism
* Lack of confidence
* State of mind/body (for example experiencing negative
stress)
The
main thing that hinders creative thinking is our belief
that we are not creative. Look at it this way. If you tell
yourself: "I am a creative person", then you have
to have beliefs about yourself that support that identity.
If you tell yourself, "I am just an ordinary human
being", then you will have a different set of beliefs.
Once you have a particular identity and set of beliefs about
yourself, you will become interested in seeking out the
skills needed to express your identity and beliefs. If you
believe that you are "uncreative", then there
is no need to learn how to become creative.
Affirmations
can be used to create a suitable self-image.
Creativity
is hampered by a too-hectic environment that does not provide
quiet time for reflection and introspection. It is also
hampered by:
-a sterile
environment that does not feed the senses
-demands for quick production of results.
-harsh words (from others or from ourselves)
-by rigid rules and barriers that prevent us from gathering
information and/or from connecting with others.
Dehumanizing
mass media can contribute to limitations on creativity.
Spend less time immersed in popular culture (television
or listening to pop music), or take conscious breaks from
the everyday world to practice creative thinking.
Other
factors that limit creative behavior include:
-Stress.
Stress is not only a distraction which drains energy which
could otherwise be used creatively, it is bad for one's
health.
- Routines.
Routines or set ways of performing tasks have their uses,
but allowing them to become too entrenched in one's life
causes one to limit the range of responses available and
can lead to the development of the anathema of creativity,
the "bureaucratic mind".
-Beliefs.
Having a strong belief in something not only limits our
response options, but causes us to limit the way in which
we perceive and process information from the outside world.
We may "filter out" information which contradicts
our belief, and end up in our own "reality tunnel",
in which we remain blissfully unaware of much that occurs
in front of our very eyes.
-Ego.
Having a strong ego identity with a particular belief exacerbates
this situation and can lead to us aggressively defending
it, to the detriment of ourselves, our creativity, and society.
This is not to imply that one must have no beliefs, merely
that one needs to be very aware of one's beliefs and consequent
limitations.
-Fear.
Fear of self expression and of the judgment of others can
severely limit one's creativity.
-
Self criticism. Negative thinking and self criticism are
also limiting factors of an individual's creativity.