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Insights
From the Road - July, 2003
Welcome
to Insights From The Road, the e-newsletter of creativity
from "The Gold Standard of Creativity Training," Roger L. Firestien,
Ph.D. Enjoy!
Use
Your Vacation Time as Creative Time
Let's
daydream for a minute. It is summertime. You are sitting on a beach
soaking up the sun, or canoeing on a mountain pond in the Adirondacks,
or hiking in the Colorado Rockies. All of a sudden, it hits you.
The breakthrough! It's the idea that will really make that new project
work, the idea that will significantly reduce the cost associated
with your new business line, the idea for how you can spend more
time with your family, or the idea for exactly how to start that
book you've been itching to write.
It
is the perfect solution. You MUST remember it. Better yet, you think,
I'll write it down. But wait. You don't have a pencil or paper with
you. You don't have your trusty cell phone to call and leave yourself
a message. Your breakthrough daydream has turned into a nightmare.
Wake
up! Here are a few suggestions to make your relaxing vacation time
an effortless creative time as well.
Wait
a minute, you might be thinking. I don't want to think about work
on my vacation. The fact is, you probably can't help thinking about
work. Even if you're not thinking about it at a conscious level,
your subconscious mind is turning over challenges, re-sorting your
thoughts, and actively seeking solutions to the obstacles you face.
When a creative thought finds an opportune moment, Eureka! It pushes
a breakthrough idea to the surface of your consciousness.
The
reason why most of us don't get our best ideas at work is because
when we are at work we're in the implementation mode, the action
mode, the make-it-happen mode. When we get away from work and our
mind relaxes, new ideas begin to flow into our consciousness. Everyday
activities like driving, walking, bathing, or falling asleep are
so automatic that we relax the judgmental part of our thinking,
thus allowing creative thoughts to break through.
Let
me provide a personal example. My first book, the creativity fable
entitled "Why Didn't I Think of That?", came to me when I least
expected to have any creative ideas whatsoever. I was in the process
of completing my doctoral dissertation, as well as teaching at the
university full time. I thought there wasn't any "space" in my brain
for anything fresh or unexpected to grow.
I
went to Washington, D.C. to visit a friend of mine. We decided to
go out for a relaxing dinner. I certainly needed a break from my
intense work schedule. When I went to bed that night I fell asleep
immediately. About three o'clock in the morning, I woke up and the
book was there -- the characters, the plot, and the story line.
Fortunately, I had packed my microcassette tape recorder. I began
to dictate the book into the recorder. I filled the entire tape.
The next morning I had to go out to buy another tape. I filled about
half of it as well.
When
I returned home the next day I started to transcribe the tape recording
into my computer. Over the next several weeks I managed to get all
of my early morning ramblings into electronic format, but I was
still in the process of finishing my dissertation and didn't have
time to work on the book. That Christmas I went to Colorado to be
with my family. I printed out what I had in the computer and spent
an evening in a cabin in the mountains rearranging paragraphs and
creating chapters. Several weeks later my dissertation and my first
book were completed! That book has since been translated into Spanish
and Hebrew and has gone into its fourth printing. If that tape recorder
hadn't been with me, the book would not exist today.
So,
be ready to catch those new insights whey they come to you. This
summer as you're packing your suntan lotion, make sure you also
throw in at least a pad of paper and a pen. Or grab a tape recorder
(with extra tape and batteries!). Who knows, you might get that
breakthrough you've been waiting for while you are charging up your
internal "battery" on the beach.
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.
©
2003 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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