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Main Page › Self Enhancement › Creativeness
 

Creativity Is Like Mining For Diamonds

 
Author: Terry Weber

Just the other day one of my friends at church asked me: Terry, you are a creative guy, what is it like to always be the one who comes up with fresh new ideas? That was the first time Id been asked that question and I had to stop and think for a minute. Then I blurted out: Its a lot of hard work! Really, said my surprised listener, it looks so easy. You always seem to pop out with good ideas with no effort.

Later, as I thought about this conversation, it occurred to me that I could have given a more complete answer so my friend would have a better understanding of the real source of what he called: the apparently easy process of getting fresh, new ideas.

Heres what I came up with in my thinking. First of all, Ive learned that thinking is hard work, much harder than the physical labor of digging ditches. If you have ever faced a white artists canvas, a block of wood waiting to be carved, or a blank computer screen that is waiting for you to fill it with words, then you can appreciate what Im saying about the hard work of thinking. Before any of those tasks can be accomplished, I find I have to spend lots of time thinking about the job to be done.

Over time, Ive learned to put down my paint brush, my carving knife, or turn off the computer lean back, put my feet up on a footstool, close my eyes and think. For a couple of hours I sit there and I mentally shovel into my brain all of the facts and impressions Ive gathered about this project over a lifetime. I try to define the problem by asking myself hundreds of questions. This is what I call my: preparation.

Next, I put all of those thoughts aside, get up, take a break and walk down to the newsstand to get the paper, I make some phone calls, or go and get a cup of coffee. I may even take a short nap. I call this my time of: incubation. (To incubate is to keep - as eggs - under conditions favorable for development).

All of this eventually, I stress: eventually, draws my thinking toward a moment in time when I get a clear vision - I call it my aha moment that suddenly puts me on the road to a successful solution to the problem at hand. Lets call this a moment of insight.

Now, my job, my task, is to figuratively pick up this insight and examine it. I mentally turn it around and around, in my mind like a cut diamond, and examine each facet to determine its value. This process of evaluation requires more hard thinking than I want to explain here.

Finally (I bet you thought Id never get to this), I can begin the exciting work of reducing all of these ideas and thoughts to practice, I can begin to make the idea real, understandable and useful to others in the form of a nautical painting, a hand carved shorebird or an interesting story such as this. In this way, (which I see as very much like mining my brain for diamonds) my creative thoughts and works are exposed and made clear to all who may be interested.

If you want to see the practical, physical results of this kind of creativity, take a look at the work, the creations, of the good folks at Crafty-Ones.com. While you are there perhaps you can visit my booth called:
http://craftyones.net/originalsbyweber

Terry L. Weber
11/17/05

Author Bio:

Terry Weber

Terry Weber is a retired advertising/direct mail sales letter copywriter and inventor of several useful items. Terry and his wife Doris are Habitat For Humanity, RV Care-A- Vanners who, for the past eight years have volunteered to help build more than 36 houses all over the USA. They travel to and from the 2- week long builds in their RV. The money they make on their Crafty-Ones website helps them pay their expenses to and from those volunteer Habitat builds. P.S. Due to the high cost of gasoline we can no longer afford to drive the RV to Habitat builds. The RV is parked until gasoline prices come down. (4/28/06)

You can search for this article using: increase creativity, creativity, creativity exercises, greater creativity, creativity innovation
 
 
 

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