Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creativity. Show all posts

Thursday, 16 February 2017

Dreams, creams and other ways to die

"Another word for creativity is courage. "
- Henri Matisse -

To be creative is a challenge in a world where changing the rules of the game can make you an outsider. But only when you question the old, you can find a new, better way. So, you need courage to try something different, to not believe everything that you are told, and to challenge your own beliefs, if needed. For the next seven days, try to be creative. Buy a notebook and write few pages with ideas every day. Small or big, good and bad, it is irrelevant, as long as you manage to fill one notebook with ideas. When you did it, check them out and make the best of them happen. Good luck!


"To keep impermanence always before your eyes makes everything sacred, because it always could be otherwise. "
- Kristi Nelson -

We live as we will never die, and we never think that today could be our last day here, on earth. We take everything as granted, and we are full of our own self-limiting beliefs. But this is not always true, and if we realize that we are mortals, and we choose to enjoy every day as it will be the last, we won. Because in the other order, we can find ourselves too old to enjoy life anymore, even if we worked the entire life thinking at our future retirement. Sometime we can even die before retiring, and what will happen then with our never fulfilled dreams? They die with us. It is time to go out and enjoy living. Because sometimes people stop living at age of 25, even if they die at 85. Do not be one of them .


"The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams."
- Eleanor Roosevelt -

So, if our dreams are so precious, why we grow up and forget everything we wanted to be, long time ago when we where children? Because there is some magic in our childhood dreams, and it is our duty to make them happen, even if we are adults now. Make a list with your childhood dreams, doesn't matter how silly they seems to be, and if it is easy, do some of them .Not necessarily the big ones, but you have choices. If you dreamed to be a fighter pilot, take few flying lesson. If you wanted to be an astronaut, go to visit NASA. It is important to be active, to be a person of action. And see the results. I am sure you will be surprised.

Friday, 11 November 2016

Sleeping enough to be awake, creating enough to be alive

"To be an artist is to believe in life."
- Henry Moore -

Because as an artist you are creative, and a creative person is closer to being a God, closer to the secret of life, fresh and sparkling ideas, bringing beauty from the mind to our reality. In the end, it is all about being authentic, being true to your Self.


"Sleep that knits up the raveled sleeve of care,
The death of each day's life, sore labor's bath,
Balm of hurt minds, great nature's second course,
Chief nourisher in life's feast."
- William Shakespeare -

We live in a sleep deprived society. One simple test to prove it, if you are using an alarm to wake up, you are not sleeping enough. For some people, sleep is a way to learn how to dream lucidly, to gain control over another dimension of your life. Tip: if you want to lucid dream, learn how to fly in your dream first.

Thursday, 30 June 2016

How to become more creative

Motto: Art is the most effective mode of communication that exists. (John Dewey)

You got sometimes all that abysmal feelings, and you cannot find the words for it. But you can put them in a song or paint, if you are artistically gifted. Why? Because a song or a picture will transcend words, and will make you to become more creative than just talking about something. It is a good idea to try different ways to create, starting with painting, sculpture and singing. Learn an instrument. All this skills will bring new facets to your personality, giving you more deepness and understanding. This is one of the ways to become more creative and expressive. It will also impact your language and your ways to express yourself. If will make you to shoot ideas like a water fountain.

Good like with this experiment. If you want, you can tell me more later about the results.
G

Tuesday, 24 November 2015

A group of random blog posts i would like to read again

1.Know The Better Question

A little while back author and investor Tim Ferriss walked me through the four things he does on a regular basis to support long haul creativity. His whole list is really good, so we’ll start there:
Daily Exercise: at least an hour, needed to lower anxiety levels and clear the head. Interestingly, the research shows that weight training is better than aerobic training for quieting the inner critic.
Keep a Maker Schedule: Carve out dedicated periods for key tasks that require creativity. If complex problem-solving or analysis is required, Ferriss recommends at least four hour blocks. And this also means no distractions—turn off email, phone, messages, skype, twitter, facebook and all the rest.
Long Walks: Without music or podcasts or distraction, purposefully letting the mind wander. This switches off spotlight attention and  switches on the default mode network—aka, the imagination network.

Surround yourself with driven people who are good at spotting your assumptions. “It’s not just people who make me question my assumptions,” Ferriss explains. “The people who are the very best at this are the ones who hear my question and responds with: ‘You’re asking the wrong question. The better question is….’” This last point is really important. While feedback can often be a hindrance to in-the-moment creativity, it’s essential for the long haul. But choice in feedback giver is critical.
This becomes doubly important the more successful you get. If you make a name for yourself in creativity people tend to (initially) trust your creative ideas a little more than they should and too frequently give you the benefit of the doubt. This is no bueno. To make sure he’s getting the feedback he needs, Ferriss hunts for folks who help him reframe his question, rather than just play devil’s advocate. This is dead on. People who play devil’s advocate often do so out of reflex—this means they tend to lack the technical sophistication to really help and often derail creativity through generalization. Reframers, meanwhile, take the idea farther faster. By providing a better question, they’re providing a new launch pad. This provide momentum. And for long haul creativity, nothing is more fundamental than momentum.

2.Momentum Matters Most

Speaking of momentum...there is something deeply exhausting about the year-in and year-out requirements of imagination. Every morning, the writer faces a blank page, the painter an empty canvas; the innovator a dozen directions to go at once. The brilliant tidbit of advice that has helped me solve this slog came from Nobel Laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Marquez said that the key was to quit working at the point you’re most excited. In other words, once Marquez really starts to cook, he shuts down the stove. This seems counter-intuitive. Creativity is an emergent property. Quitting when most excited—when ideas are really emerging—seems like the exact opposite of what you should do. Yet Marquez is exactly right. Creativity isn’t a single battle; it’s an ongoing war. By quitting when you’re most excited, you’re carrying momentum into the next day’s work session. Momentum is the key. When you realize that you left off the day prior at someplace both exciting and familiar—someplace where you know the idea that comes next—you dive right back in, no time wasted, no time to let fear creep back into the equation, and far less time to get up to speed.

3.A Few Thoughts on Sobbing, Shouting, and Punching Hard Objects

I’ve written nine books. Two are in drawers. Seven are in stores. All share one thing in common: at some point during their writing, I ended up on the ground, sobbing, shouting, and punching the floor.
About five years ago, I heard author David Foster Wallace tell a story about the difficulty of creativity. “It never fails,” he said,  “at least once a book, I end up on the ground, sobbing, screaming and punching the floor.” The obvious point here is yes, creativity is insanely frustrating for everybody. The core question for Long Haul Creativity is what to do about it? Turns out, researchers have discovered, that frustration is actually a fundamental step in the creative process. From a technical perspective, this seems to have something to do with the limits of working memory and the requirements of creativity’s incubation period, but no one is exactly certain. From a practical perspective, this means reversing our traditional relationship with frustration. Since this emotion is a basic step in the creative process, frustration is actually a sign of progress, a sign of movement in the right direction, a sign that that much needed breakthrough is ever closer to showing up.

4.Sir Ken Robinson Weighs In On Frustration

I just got back from presenting at the World Business Forum in Milan, Italy, where I got to spend some time with creativity expert and all around great guy Sir Ken Robinson. Sir Ken pointed out that long haul creativity requires a low-level, near-constant sense of frustration—and this is different than the just discussed moment-of-madness version of frustration. Moment-of-madness frustration is what makes you punch the ground. The version Ken is describing is about motivation.  It’s a near-constant itchy dissatisfaction, a deep sense of what if, and we can make it better, and the like. To illustrate this,  he told me a story about George Lucas. Robinson, apparently, popped the question: “Hey George,” he said, “why do you keep remaking all those Star Wars movies?” Lucas had a great answer: “In this particular universe, I’m God. And God isn’t satisfied.”

5.Everybody’s Got A Job To Do

There’s this mistaken assumption that creativity is mostly a solitary pursuit. This may be true, but the business of creativity is always collaborative. Every published journalist has had to brave a gauntlet of editors, copy-editors, managing editors ad infinitum. Movies and books and plays and poems are more of the same. Startup entrepreneurs always have investors—etc. And this brings me to an important point: everybody’s got a job to do. And everybody wants to keep that job. In writing, this means that even if you turn in something perfect, my editors are still being paid to edit—so they will. This is why every time I turn in a piece of finished work, I intentionally include a few horrible lines. It gives my editors something to do. It lets them feel useful. It keeps their grubby little hands away from my damn perfect sentences.

6.Creativity Is A By-Product

Contrary to popular opinion, creativity is almost always the by-product of passionate hard work and not the other way around. Olympian and gazillion time X Games gold medalist Gretchen Blieler—one of the more creative snowboarders in history—puts it this way: “You don’t wake up and say: today I’m going to be more creative. You do the things you love to do and try to get at their essence and allow things to emerge.”

(delivered by Flow Hacker Nation newsletter)

Creativity Decoded


The one thing neuroscientists know for sure about creativity is it’s not one thing. The brain is creative in dozens and dozens of different ways, which is why training people to be more creative can be so difficult. Yet, what we do know is that creativity is always recombinatory — it’s the product of new information bumping into old ideas to produce something startlingly new.

What’s more, we also know that this recombinatory process always requires the interaction of three overlapping neural networks: attention, imagination and salience. Understanding how these networks work and how we can augment their effects gives long haul creatives some much needed leverage.

-Attention: This network governs executive attention or spotlight attention. It’s the go-to system for the hours-on-end laser-focus required by creativity. And this leads to an obvious intervention: anything that trains up attention, amplifies creativity. Almost any mindfulness practice will work or, if you prefer a more dynamic experience, the Flow Genome Project designed this Art of Flow video-meditation for those too twitchy to follow their breath.

-Imagination: The imagination network or, more formally, the default mode network (DMN), is all about mind-wandering. It’s what allows you to construct mental simulations of potential outcomes and test out creative possibilities. The trick here is you have to stop focusing on the problem you’ve been trying to solve to activate the DMN. This means turning off the spotlight attention system. Research shows the best way to pull this off is low-grade physical activity. I prefer gardening. Tim Ferris (see below) likes long walks. But Lee Zlotoff, creator of the TV show MacGyver and (no surprise) an expert on creative problem solving, has tested dozens of different activities, and found that building models—airplanes, dinosaurs, whatever—consistently produces the best results.

-Salience: This network monitors incoming information and tags it as important or irrelevant. The more salient info the brain detects, the more raw material it has to be creative. The big issue here is that familiarity breeds contempt—meaning, when we are locked into our normal routine this network usually runs on autopilot. It notices what it always notices. The secret to getting it’s attention is risk and novelty. New experiences and new ideas. Ceaseless adventure and constant reading are key. For the former, see this article I wrote on risk and creativity. For the latter, books are always better than magazines, newspapers, blogs etc.—I explain why in this piece for Forbes.

*The best book on all the different neuronal systems involved in creativity is neuroscientist and pioneering flow research Arne Dietrich’s recently released How Creativity Happens In the Brain. But be warned, this is not light summer fare. Dietrich is funny as hell, but the book is dense and—because it’s published by an academic publisher—expensive.

(article from Flow Hacker Nation)