What shape is your talent?

02 Apr

Another great post from Daniel Coyle about increasing your capacity to improve your talents. I think I’m a funnel. And you?

Squirrels & creativity

01 Mar

What does everyone know about squirrels? Nuts, right?  And most people know that squirrels like to store nuts until they need them.

We can learn a great lesson about creativity from our furry friends: Always be gathering and storing. Whether it’s to keep a journal or notebook handy, to have a digital recorder nearby, or whatever other storage solution one chooses to go with, the key is to capture the nuts when they fall from the tree. The second lesson is to make sure the nuts can be easily retrieved whenever they are needed. Nuts left too long underground will go to seed and lose their capacity to feed the squirrel.

So start storing those nuts. Who knows how many great ideas can come from one little seed?

Make a map

31 Jan

Having spent the last several months learning about the process of writing, a key discovery to share from the road is the power of making a map. Very simply, when you write out or “envision” the end result with as much detail as possible, a process begins in your subconscious mind that will literally change the way you see the world.

This is another way of employing Mr. Covey’s 2nd habit, namely, to “Begin with the end in mind.” This is not a process to be rushed. It could be likened to a sculptor who walks around a piece of granite, looking at it again and again from as many angles as possible before making a single mark.

Although it may be an intense process, it need not be complicated. Just the opposite. If one takes a blank piece of paper and begins to sketch out what the end result will look like when one has accomplished it, without fail there will come ideas and insights that will provide aid along the way.

So make a map. Start with the end. Picture what it will look or feel like when you get there. Then begin to fill in the blanks, one by one. These become your goals or mileposts.

Happy travels.

Creating white space

10 Jan

The two obvious prerequisites to any creative endeavor are first, making time to be creative and then second, making the most of our creative time. I learned a great deal from this article that was recently written up in the Harvard Business Review about how author Jim Collins creates regular “white space” for creative endeavors. It is important to note that Collins isn’t a painter, a novelist, or a musician. His creative work is to write books about business. This is important to note because it reaffirms the truth that all of us are creative, just in different ways. Creativity is in no way limited to the arts or to artistic endeavors. We can approach every aspect of life creatively, whether it’s our job, our work as a parent, or in any other endeavor in which we are involved.

If you don’t have time to read the entire article, (because you’re too busy being creative! Yeah!!) here is the most relevant excerpt:

“Jim took out a piece of paper and drew a picture of four blocks stacked atop each other. Pointing at the top block, he said, “I block out the morning from 8 am to noon to think, read and write. ” He unplugs everything electronic, including his Internet connection. Although he has a reputation for reclusiveness, when asked about this, he replies: “I’m not reclusive. But I need to be in the cave to work.”

After lunch, he spends his afternoon in the office with his researchers, or with clients. (His work looks different to an onlooker, who expects work time to be filled with meetings, phone calls and emails. Au contraire, he doesn’t want to “confuse activity with productivity.”) In the late afternoon he goes for a long run or rock climb, again to clear his mind. Then comes dinner, possibly more writing, and bed.

One of his favorite quotes comes from the famously disciplined French novelist Gustave Flaubert: “Be regular and orderly in your life, so that you may be violent and original in your work.” For Collins, high-quality work requires long stretches of high-quality thinking. “White space,” as he calls it, is the prerequisite for fresh, creative thought. It’s the time that he spends with nothing scheduled, so that he can empty his mind, like the proverbial teacup, and refill it with new thought.

He aims to spend 100 days next year in the white space. “As a great teacher, Rochelle Myers, taught me, you can’t make your own life a work of art if you’re not working with a clean canvas,” he says. (Another smart bit of Collins philosophy: “Speak less. Say more.”)

Clearly, Collins lives different life than the rest of us because, as a best-selling author, he can afford to. (But even when he couldn’t afford to — before he became famous — he spent his time thinking and working on his first book, Built to Last, turning down consulting offers from large companies that wanted him to travel to them. And he credits that “time in the cave” spent thinking for his success.)

So he challenges the rest of us to “afford” white space time. He questions whether that frenetic pace is actually getting companies anywhere (indeed, frenetic companies are usually those in decline, as he points out in his recent book, How the Mighty Fall). At the end of his keynote speech, he exhorted the gathered HR managers to create their own white spaces — even if for only a half hour a day. I could practically hear everyone thinking, “Great idea. Love it. But I haven’t got time!”

Here’s to making some personal “white space” in 2010. Excuses are so 2009. Let this be the year that you start small and “afford” some white space to work on creativity. “If you must, you will.”

Creativity = Connectivity

16 Dec

Very meaningful post from The Talent Code’s Daniel Coyle about the idea of connectivity, which he suggests could replace the word creativity. Here is the section I found the most valuable:

“The deeper question is, how do we create more of these explosions?

To answer that, let’s look at what those connections really are. They are neural links — connected wires in our brain. Ideas don’t just float in the air — they exist, as electrical circuits… In fact, we could replace the word “creativity” with a new term: “connectivity.” And to maximize creative connectivity, you need to do two very different tasks:

1) gather ideas

2) connect them

For the gathering phase, we need lots of inputs, lots of filtering and categorizing. To be good at this is like being a human vacuum cleaner, hoovering up ideas and funneling them into various memory bins.

For the second phase, we need time and space to let the connections form and grow. It’s what management consultant and author Jim Collins refers to as “the white space” — the area of the day when real thinking happens.

Look closely at any creative person, and you’ll see that they have structured their lives to create acres of white space; Charles Dickens took endless walks through the city; Einstein played violin; Collins unplugs all electronics and goes “into the cave” from 8 a.m. until noon every day. All are good examples of Flaubert’s code: “Be regular and orderly in your life, so that you may be violent and original in your work.”

We’re living an interesting moment. For gathering ideas, it’s unquestionably richest time in history; we are standing in a torrent of stimulus and ideas. For finding that quiet place to connect those ideas, however, it’s exactly the opposite; white space is scarce and getting scarcer. Which makes it all the more valuable.”

Also be sure and click on the Jim Collins link. His thoughts on “white space” are priceless.

White Christmas and the story behind it

09 Dec

bing

Wonderful article from the Wall Street Journal about the best selling song of all time, White Christmas. Yet more proof that inspiration is the fruit of work and experience.

Genius takes work (lots!)

02 Dec

Always love the posts from Daniel Coyle, author of The Talent Code. Here’s one about the process of genius that struck home. Turns out it’s all about editing…and editing…and editing. Be sure and check out the links to Dicken’s The Christmas Carol and Springsteen’s  Born to Run.

The right brain says “feed me”

17 Nov

Great post from Marelisa on ways to feed your right brain. Try #6 (The African Healing Dance) while driving home from work ;-)

A Nifty Idea for Nifty Art

16 Nov

Art-o-Matic Take a look at the work of  Clark Whittington, the inventor of the Art-O-Mat machine. He recycles old cigarette vending machines and converts them into trendy vending machines  which dispense art that runs from $5 – $7. There are currently around 400 contributing artists from 10 different countries. You can find these machines scattered hither and thither across the country. I would like one for my front porch. It is so much healthier to be addicted to art- and no cancer-causing side effects. Such creativity, ingenuity and pizazz must be noticed. Go take a look.

Ging’

Write down your goals

16 Nov

If this story doesn’t get you to quit making excuses and write down those goals, I’m not sure what will. Just do it. What’s there to lose?

Be Mused

every fire needs a spark