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Insights
From the Road - April, 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!
Creativity
and Crisis
This
summer I experienced a personal crisis. Unfortunately, these things
happen to all of us. Relationships end. People close to us pass
away. Tragedies occur.
For
a time, I felt absolutely numb. I had trouble sleeping and woke
up depressed, not excited about the day like I usually am. Yes,
I continued to work and go through the motions of everyday existence.
But I felt nothing was going on in my life. I wasnÕt writing. I
wasnÕt developing new material. I was just surviving.
I
told a good friend I felt I was just marking time. She said that
during the difficult times in her life she too thought nothing was
going on Š at least on the surface. Subconsciously, however, things
were occurring. After she "healed" she experienced a tremendous
outpouring of creative productivity. I listened, continued to grieve
and hoped what she said was true. It was.
It
took almost seven months to really feel back to normal again. Then
an incredible thing occurred. All this creative "stuff" that had
been brewing inside of me came to the surface. I began to write
again. My work got better. My relationships with the people closest
to me, my family and daughter, got better. I looked forward to getting
up in the morning again. The creativity had come back Š my creative
spirit had survived!
Last
year, on September 11 our country experienced a national tragedy.
We all grieved. Some of us lost sleep. We went through the motions
of life hoping this terrible nightmare would end. Eventually we
began to heal, and our creative spirit reawakened. In some cases,
we actually became more creative.
For
example, in the December 12, 2001 issue of USA Today, the cover
story "Call For Safer Skies Inspires Innovation: Firms Get Creative
To Improve Airline Safety" featured this creative re-birth:
"Safety
in the skies and airports could lead to a business gold rush next
year as companies scramble to land billions of dollars in federal
contracts that will be doled out to meet the mandates of the new
aviation-security law. One company sells duck-hunting bullets
that shatter on impact and wonÕt pierce an airplaneÕs hull if
sky marshals must open fire in a passenger cabin. Another uses
state-of- the-art Internet technology to watch the cockpit. Yet
another stuffs heavy-duty foam into jet-fighter fuel tanks to
keep the aircraft from exploding during battle."
So
what is the lesson here? The lesson is trust the process. Tragedies
happen to all of us. During the recovery period it appears nothing
is going on. But things are going on at a much deeper level. If
we decide to move on and refuse to allow grief or depression to
paralyze us, we can expect a time of great creative productivity
after the healing process.
Right
now, we can build on the healing that has occurred over the last
several months. LetÕs expect that outpouring of creativity and make
it a turning point in our culture and lives. 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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