Art is beautiful, it's something in your head
The Art of Creativity
this picture is from www.beautifullife.info
When the creative spirit stirs, it animates a style of
being: a lifetime filled with the desire to innovate, to explore new. Has this
ever happened to you? You're out for a jog, completely relaxed, your mind a
pleasant blank. Then all of a sudden the solution to a problem you've been
mulling over for weeks pops into your head. You can't help but wonder why you
didn't think of it before. In such moments you've made contact with the creative
spirit, that elusive muse of good—and sometimes great—ideas. Yet it is more
than an occasional insight. When the creative spirit stirs, it animates a style
of being: a lifetime filled with the desire to innovate, to explore new ways of
doing things, to bring dreams of reality.
That flash of inspiration is the final moment of a
process marked by distinctive stages—the basic steps in creative
problem-solving. The first stage is preparation, when you search out any
information that might be relevant. It's when you let your imagination roam
free. Being receptive, being able to listen openly and well is a crucial skill
here.
Once you have mulled over all the relevant pieces and
pushed your rational mind to the limits, you can let the problem simmer. This
is the incubation stage, when you digest all you have gathered. It's a stage
when much of what goes on occurs outside your focused awareness, in the
unconscious. As the saying goes, "You sleep on it."
The unconscious mind is far more suited to creative
insight than the conscious mind. Ideas are free to recombine with other ideas
in novel patterns and unpredictable associations. It is also the storehouse of
everything you know, including things you can't readily call into awareness.
Further, the unconscious speaks to us in ways that go beyond words, including
the rich feelings and deep imagery of the senses.
We are more open to insights from the unconscious mind
when we are not thinking of anything in particular. That is why daydreams are
so useful in the quest for creativity. Anytime you can just daydream and relax
is useful in the creative process: a shower, long drives, a quiet walk.
With luck, immersion and daydreaming lead to
illumination, when all of a sudden the answer comes to you as if from nowhere.
This is the popular stage—the one that usually gets all the glory and
attention, the moment that people sweat and long for, the feeling "This is
it!" But the thought alone is still not a creative act. The final stage is
translation, when you take your insight and transform it into action; it
becomes useful to you and others.
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