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Saving Your Ear!
How Creative Excursions and
“Not-Thinking” Can Lead to Eureka Moments!
Gregg Fraley © 2008
You don’t have to be an artist to want to cut
your ear off when you’ve hit the wall trying to solve a problem. When nothing
is coming to you and you’re creatively blocked, it’s frustrating. Here is a
tool for helping you through tough mental times, it’s called a Creative
Excursion.
Creative Excursions (Crecursion? Creventure?)
are much like what the name sounds like, it’s a bit of a venture into the
unknown, a non-focused exploration. The dictionary definition for excursion is
instructive: it’s a “deviation” from the direct course, a pleasure trip -- it’s
a bit of an “out and back.” For our purposes, it’s about giving your mind a
chance to incubate, while at the same time unconsciously gathering solution
seeds from the stimulus of your surroundings. You take time off, as much as you
can get away with, even an hour can be helpful, three even better. Plan to do
nothing except explore and make observations about what you find intriguing.
Here’s how it’s done:
- Make sure you have
enough time. If you are pressured
to get back somewhere or if you rush it you really won’t give your mind the
break it needs.
- Do it alone.
A creative excursion is a time when you need to be alone in order to achieve a
sense of balance, a sense of peace, and a sense of personal playfulness.
- Do something
essentially reflective. A slow
walk through a museum, a park or garden you’ve never been to, a group of
shops, or a different part of town, you get the picture, something different
to experience. Get to a place where you can enjoy being with yourself, and, a
place that has some stimulus that is not your usual thing.
- Be comfortable.
Wear shoes you can walk in, clothes you feel good in. Bring those little
things you need to take care of yourself.
- Do something at
least a bit physical. Walking,
easy-going biking, or not-too-strenuous hiking could all be part of a creative
excursion. Physical activity is all by itself a great way to refresh the
mind.
- Put the challenge
that you are blocked on into the back of your mind.
This is the time to Not Think about it. Say to yourself, “I know this is a
challenge for me, and I intend to solve it, but for now I’m going to give my
mind a rest. I believe when I come back I’ll be refreshed and will be able to
do more creative thinking. Until then, I relax, and start noticing what’s
around me.” You open the doors to your mind and allow it to respond to
external suggestions.
- Bring a small
notebook and pen to write down observations.
Open your head to any thought and write down thoughts and observations as they
occur. These are things that are not related to your challenge. For instance
you might walk into a record store and hear and old Motown song and it takes
you back to some fun time you had. Write that down… “Stevie Wonder’s song My
Cheri Amour reminds me of …” Or you notice a brilliantly done display at a
department store and you might note, “simple designs are often the most
effective.” It doesn’t have to be profound, it’s just things as they occur to
you. It can even be as simple as one word, such as seeing a sweater with a
great color and writing down “scarlet.”
When you return from your creative excursion
you switch back to thinking about your challenge. Taking your notebook in hand,
use each phrase or observation as stimulus in a personal brainstorming session.
This is called Forced Association and it is often a way to trigger breakthrough
ideas. Review each item and ask yourself, what does this
phrase/observation/thought have me thinking about my challenge? What does it
suggest in the way of a solution? It is often magical how something totally
unrelated can give you the big idea you are looking for. When Archimedes
shouted Eureka! and figured out how to measure an object’s density, what was he
doing? Day dreaming in a bath tub! Take a hint, relax, take an excursion, and
make some magic work for yourself.
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