I've read a lot of advice about how to spark creativity. Everyone's creativity takes a different form, however, so the advice that works varies from person to person.
For example, I put a lot of pressure on myself to be efficient and productive. One of my struggles, therefore, is to allow myself to spend time on activities that don't pay off in some direct way. Creativity often involves play, digression, exploration, experimentation, and failed attempts; it doesn't always look productive.
As ludicrous as it may sound, I have to force myself to wander, and schedule time for goofing off.
Here are some creativity-boosting strategies that work for me:
1. Take notes. I have a compulsion to take notes as I read. I write down quotations and bits of information that catch my interest. In fact, all my book projects have really been ways to justify taking the notes that I most wanted to take.
I used to fight the urge to take notes that weren't related to a specific project, but now I let myself go. I make strange lists, for no reason. I take notes without a purpose. I realize that sometimes, even many years later, I do find a purpose for those notes. All this note-taking is time-consuming, but in the end, highly satisfying. Along the same lines, I...
2. Follow my interests. I no longer try to curb my reading impulses; I don't try to stop myself from reading everything ever written about St. Therese of Lisieux, or everything that Gary Taubes has ever written about nutrition, or lots of children's literature. Instead of focusing on what I "ought" to be doing, I allow myself to wander -- by buying an odd book, poking around the Internet, or exploring an unusual place.
3. Buy supplies. As a confirmed under-buyer, I dislike making purchases, but in keeping with my resolution to "enjoy a modest splurge," I encourage myself to make an occasional creativity-supporting purchase. A few months ago, I bought a beautiful set of magic markers and an oversized pad of drawing paper. For some reason, I just craved them. And indeed, when I got home, I sat down to a spell of...
4.Draw an idea-map. This is a process of writing down ideas in a way that helps you see new relationships and possibilities. I begin with a symbol or word in the center, and then map out my associations with that word -- using single words and colored pens to keep the ideas vivid and clear. By mapping out my ideas, I get a new kind of insight into my own thoughts.
5. Enjoy the fun of failure. This catchphrase has made a huge difference to me. I'm very ambitious and want to succeed at everything I try, and that makes me very anxious -- which isn't a creative frame of mind. Telling myself that I can enjoy the "fun of failure" has made me (somewhat) more light-hearted about taking risks. As G. K. Chesterton wrote, "If a thing is worth doing, it is worth doing badly."
6. Read random magazines. Every once in a while, I pick up several magazines that I would never ordinarily read. It's surprisingly interesting and useful. And I love the feeling of possibility that I get whenever I browse in one of those stores that carries 500 different magazines.
7. Indulge my magpie impulses. I was fascinated to read that when Twyla Tharp has a new project, she starts a cardboard file box to collect all the materials that inspired her -- everything from a toy to a CD to a photograph. The first thing she puts in is a slip of paper with a stated goal for the project -- something like "keep it simple" or "something perfect" or "tell a story." "Everything is raw material," she says. "Everything is relevant. Everything is usable. Everything feeds into my creativity. But without proper preparation, I cannot see it, retain it, and use it." When I have the urge to collect materials, articles, or information, I now indulge it. Although I generally fight against any stuff that could become clutter, as with note-taking, I find that these collected materials help spur my creativity.
One of the main outlets for my magpie impulses is this blog. Here I collect many of my favorite quotations, intriguing passages from books I've read, interesting images, stories I've heard from my friends, and questions that plague me. It's very, very satisfying. I used to worry that writing every day on my blog would drain me of ideas, but in fact, the more I create, the more I want to create.
What strategies have you found to help spur creativity? What works for you?
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I just let it happen. No need to prompt it.
I know this one is hard to grasp but it has a parallel in my field of Science.
When something goes Wrong in an experient (and usually it happens half the time!) I am always opened up to many more avenues of questions than my initial single minded hypothesis. And from these new questions comes new insights into the Subject that would not have been gleaned if not for the initial break down of what I thought/hoped would be a straight-forward experiment!
and when you do not,
write it, paint it,
be it fresco or dot.
just let your emotions
to the surface, rise.
what your imagination
will conjure,
a most pleasant
surprise☺☻
Never bluff. If you have a bad hand, toss it in and wait for the next deal. When you get a good hand, hang onto it and play it for all its worth. It doesn't work in poker, but it works in real life.
The only losers are those who didn't try.
Never, ever, ever give up. Analyze, criticize, adjust and try again.
There is a solution for every problem, usually more than one. Choose the one that is elegantly simple, hurts nobody else, and generates the most profit.
The time you take to record your creative impulses one day
can be just the starting point you need
to get going on another day.
I come home energized and full of ideas..not copying what I saw, but taking all that passion colour and technique and channeling it through my own creativity - it's wonderfully stimulating..
Even going online and looking at an artist's work can be very invigorating...
When I had tried to only focus, I couldn't work very effectively. But when I diffused my experiences, I felt more freedom to focus. Almost every creativity adviser says to do the opposite of difusion. I think we're on to something!