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Insights
From the Road - September 23, 2002
Welcome
to Insights From The Road, the e-newsletter of creativity
from "The Gold Standard of Creativity Training," Roger L. Firestien,
Ph.D. Enjoy!
It
Takes Two
Recently
a good friend of mine was working on a major writing project. She
procrastinated for months. When she finally began, she described
the writing process as "agonizing."
As
soon as she had written a page or two, she would edit and re-work
it. She was a good writer, but too hard on herself. She asked me
to coach her on the project and I agreed. As part of the coaching
process, we watched the movie "Finding Forrester."
In
the movie, Sean Connery plays William Forrester, a Pulitzer Prize-winning
recluse who never gave the world a second novel. Living alone off
his royalties in a Brooklyn apartment, Forrester reluctantly becomes
friends with a neighborhood teenager, Jamal Wallace, a talented
16-year-old basketball player whose secret passion is writing.
In
one scene, Forester and Jamal are sitting across the table from
each other at typewriters. As Forrester begins pounding away at
the keys, Jamal just stares at a blank sheet of paper. Forrester
stops and asks Jamal why he isn't writing. Jamal replies, "I'm thinking."
Forrester bellows at him, "Don't think. Just write. Write anything!"
Forrester then delivers one of my favorite lines in the movie: "You
write the first draft with your heart. You re-write with your head."
In
our book, "Creativity Unbound," Blair Miller, Jonathan Vehar and
I discuss the idea of the writer's mind and the editor's mind:
"Great
authors are of two minds. One is the writer's mind, the wildly imaginative,
freewheeling renegade. The other is the editor's mind, which goes
back after the writer's mind has done its work and weeds out the
extraneous, non-value-adding words, phrases and ideas. Not even
the greatest writers can perform those two functions at the same
time. In fact, the great writers are vigilant about keeping those
two functions distinct."
This
same principle applies to all creative thinking. Alex Osborn, in
his breakthrough book "Applied Imagination," noted two distinct
kinds of thinking that are essential for being creative. One is
divergent thinking, which is generating lots of options. The other
is convergent thinking - judging those options, focusing and making
decisions.
Good
news! We all do both kinds of thinking every day. The secret to
becoming more creative is to become conscious of which thinking
mode you're in, so you can separate your divergent and convergent
thinking.
So
next time you want to get more creative - whether it's for a major
writing project or just to make your office more efficient - first
let the writer's mind loose. Go for some wild ideas. Don't judge
your ideas; just let them flow. Then, after you've generated many
options, apply the editor's mind to sort and refine those ideas.
Once
you separate the writer's mind from the editor's mind, you'll be
amazed how creative you can become.
Now,
go get creative out there!
Sincerely,
Roger Firestien
Insights
From The Road is published irregularly by:
Roger L. Firestien, Ph.D.
PO Box 615
Williamsville NY 14231-0615
Creativity
That Gets Results(TM)
For
a free subscription to Innovation Espresso, the print newsletter
of creativity, e-mail your mailing address to roger@rogerfirestien.com.
©
2002 Roger L. Firestien, Ph.D.
Phone
716-631-3564 Fax 716-631-2610
No part of this publication may be reproduced or electronically
transmitted without this copyright line intact.
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