|
Remember Long Lists
4
tips for Sharpening your Memory
|
Memory Improvement Articles
word count: 1005
character width: 50
Resource box: 5 lines + web link to Easy Motivation
===================================================
How To Become A Creative Genius
By
Patrick Chan
Technically speaking, the best way to boost your creativity is
to boost the communication flow between your two brain
hemispheres: your left and right brains.
Apparently during the creative process, our left and right
brains are focused on the problem, exchanging information to
and fro in a form of a "partnership."
Highly creative people are known to have an easy and
unobstructed flow of information between their left and right
brains. They know how to increase the stimulation to their
brain and expose it to lots of experiential stimulation,
stretching and expanding its creative prowess by bringing it
to new uncharted waters.
After all, they understand that every learning experience is a
mental one. And the more mentally stimulating and experiential
an activity is, the more they learn.
Know The Fundamental Skills of Creative Thinking
"It is not enough to have a good mind; the main thing is to
use it."
- Descartes
There are essentially five fundamental skills of creativity.
- Fundamental Skill #1: Seizing The Opportunity
One of the most fundamental skills of creativity is the
ability to see an opportunity and seize it.
Every day, we are faced with countless opportunities to
develop our creative thinking skills. Such opportunities
present themselves while we are at home with the kids, going
to work, at the workplace, at board meetings, out to lunch, or
hanging out in the pubs with our friends.
The problem we face is not so much a lack of activities or
events to stimulate our creative senses. There is in fact no
shortage of encounters for us to develop our creativity. The
real challenge is for us to recognize these moments as
opportunities for seizing and for creative outburst.
- Fundamental Skill #2: Challenging Assumptions
Many inventions were the result of people who were willing to
challenge assumptions that existed during their time.
People tend to see only what they think to see. Every time we
look at something that is in our world, we make our own
assumptions about the reality before us. We based our lives
and decisions on those assumptions we make. If we accept those
assumptions as real and concrete, we will live by them.
However, the moment someone chooses to challenge those same
assumptions as "unreal", he or she may be on the road to
discovering something new and different.
Challenging assumptions is an important component of
creativity because it forces us to look beyond what is already
accepted or is obvious. It can lead to the kind of perceptual
breakthroughs we are looking for in the problems before us.
Oftentimes our assumptions of things are so entrenched that it
never crosses our minds to challenge them. These assumptions
are apparently so established that we no longer question their
validity, even though time has passed and things have changed.
We are so used to them that we simply accept them as they are.
But many of our life,s problems are tainted with false
assumptions and they prevent us from thinking something new
and different. They stifle our creativity and the result is
the more or less the same set of tried solutions. No new and
novel possibilities.
Challenging assumptions is an important component of
creativity because it forces us to look beyond what is already
accepted or is obvious. It can lead to the kind of perceptual
breakthroughs we are looking for in the problems before us.
- Fundamental Skill #3: Taking Risks
Taking risks is part and parcel of being a creative thinker.
If you're not willing to take risks (and these can include
calculated risks) and experience failure, then you cannot
expect to be a great creative thinker. No one truly succeeds
without failing first. And no one truly becomes a creative
genius without having to "risk his ideas."
However, if you really want to experience major leaps in your
creativity, then you'll have to learn to take risks. You'll
fail but failure is good: it accelerates the learning process
by generating new information and science has shown that our
brain literally rewires itself each time we make a mistake.
Our brain learns through a series of trials and errors.
- Fundamental Skill #4:
Looking At Problems From A New Perspective
No new ideas will evolve from old perspectives. To create a
new product, you must be able to visualize that new product.
But you cannot do this if you keep looking at your problem
from the same perspective.
You got to look at your problems from a new perspective in
order to gain new insights. By changing your perspective and
shifting to a new one, you will be able to expand your mental
horizon and capture something you were previously unable to
see. Only by seeing something new, will you be able to think
up new ideas and create something new.
- Fundamental Skill #5: Thinking Ambiguously The ability to
think ambiguously is a great boon to yielding creative
insights.
This same ability is being exhibited every time someone
indulges in wordplay or humor.
People who can think ambiguously are known to be fluid and
flexible thinkers. A tinge of ambiguous thinking during the
idea generation stage of the creative process has the power to
bring out a genius of an idea!
However, the main problem in our society is that people
generally prefer things that are clear and unambiguous. They
don't like to associate themselves with things that are vague
and have more than one meaning. As a result, we become rather
rigid in the way we think, preferring to be involved in only
things that have clear and specific parameters. The outcome:
predictability.
About the Author: Patrick Chan is the brainchild behind
http://www.wordjuxtapoz.com/
He's the creator of Word Juxtapoz® - a creative concept of
juxtaposing words and pictures to depict visual rebuses that
are simply mind-blowing! He's been creating these wacky brain
teasers since 1994 which are now enjoyed by thousands of
people & used by hundreds of educators & trainers.
Source: www.isnare.com
|