I’ve been thinking about creativity a lot lately, how to inspire and preserve it, and create a process to replicate it. I know creativity …
I’ve been thinking about creativity a lot lately, how to inspire and preserve it, and create a process to replicate it. I know creativity requires randomness, which is part of my frustration. My own creativity has emerged from being an early adopter of new ideas, and having a lot of varied experiences. However, in the past 3 years I’ve been cycling through ideas, and have siloed myself into a routine when it comes to hobbies and work. Also, as an early adopter of ideas I’ve been responsible for conveying them. Spending more of my time evangelizing, and less time discovering new ones has resulted in mental stagnation.
I know this is probably one of those posts that people will roll their eyes at “yeah right you’re mind is really stagnating…” But here’s why I think this is an important personal battle:
So how can I stay wide-eyed, avoid cynicism, and have new experiences that will actually help me to grow? Sheer drive and digging deeper.
Creativity is not a talent. It is a way of operating.
– John Cleese
I’ve had a breadth of experiences, but I cannot say I’ve had a depth of experiences. So instead of dismissing an idea or experience as “been there done that”, I’m actually forcing repetition, and looking deeper. For example, I’ve been practicing the same form of yoga for almost 9 years now. To prevent boredom I deconstruct postures, and think about how I can go deeper in them.
When it come to my other love: engineering, this past year I’ve spent less time actually engineering, and more time teaching and writing. This is extremely gratifying but there is part of me that grows antsy to build. To fill that void I have to channel my engineering skills into building my business.
Finally, I know the desire to continue being creative, and having a level of dissatisfaction will keep me growing. Curious to know if other people who are my age feel the same way, and how they resolve it? Have you ever experienced cramped creativity?