| There   is a view that says that most people can only have one top idea in their mind   at one time. When I was writing a report which was overdue, I remember trying   to focus on the main ideas in my work but other ideas kept hovering around   like pesky gnats constantly distracting me. I finally found the way to keep   my mind centered on the big idea was to write down the small ones floating   around on a piece of paper on my bedside. It was as if I had finally nailed   these pesky gnats and I could now work in peace on my magnum opus. The   hard fact is that most people have only one top idea in their mind at any   given time as Paul , in an interesting   article, insists. That’s the idea their thoughts   will drift toward when they’re allowed to drift   freely. And this idea will thus tend to get all the benefit of that any form   of creative thinking, while others are starved of it. Which means it’s   a disaster to let the wrong idea become the top one in your mind. Everyone   who’s worked on difficult problems is probably familiar   with the phenomenon of working hard to figure something out, failing, and   then suddenly seeing the answer a bit later while doing something else. There’s   a kind of thinking you do without trying to. I’m   increasingly convinced this type of thinking is not merely helpful in solving   hard problems, but necessary. The tricky part is, you can only control your   own thoughts only indirectly. Everyone   know that you can’t really directly control where   your thoughts drift. Therein lies the paradox- if you’re   controlling them, they’re not drifting. And if   they are not allowed to drift, how will you ever get those great new ideas   that light up bulbs. But   you can control them indirectly, by controlling what situations you let   yourself get into. You need to try instead to get yourself into situations   where the most urgent problems are ones you want think about. You don’t   have complete control, of course. An emergency could push other thoughts out   of your head. But barring emergencies you have a good deal of indirect   control over what becomes the top idea in your mind. And to do that the first   thing you have to do is make sure you are not distracted by some kinds of   ideas that are peskier than the gnats I mentioned in the begining. There   are two types of thoughts especially worth avoiding—thoughts which push out   more interesting ideas. The most obdurate one is thinking about money.   Anything to do with money is almost by definition an attention sink. I have   known people who get up from deep sleep to turn on their computers to figure out   if they could buy something cheaper or raise their bid in one of those awful   internet auctions. Others just worry about money or lack there of. But if you   think about money, you can forget thinking about anything else. The   other is disputes. All fights are essentially idea destroyers. They may feel   like that they get your creative juices flowing but really there is no real substance to them. There is another aspect of disputes worth   thinking about. While disputes themselves are indeed a creative thought sink,   it is their aftermath that is even more damaging. Think of it this way – once   the dispute is over, you rarely turn it off but instead keep brooding about   what you could have done differently to have won the argument. It   is here that the old adage of “turning the other cheek” may actually turn out   to have selfish advantages. Someone who does you an injury hurts you twice:   first by the injury itself, and second by taking up your time afterward   thinking about it. If you learn to ignore injuries you can at least avoid the   second half. You can avoid thinking about nasty things people have done to   you by telling yourself: this doesn’t   deserve space in your head. If you have forgotten the details of old   disputes, you are on way to recovery because that means you have not been   thinking about them leaving space for creative thinking instead and for new   ideas. I suspect a lot of people aren’t sure what is the top idea in their mind at any given time. Or how to get to be in a position to receive them? In short, how do you become creative? How do you get to that top idea in your mind. First don’t think about money, second avoid disputes or if you have them, get over them quickly. But to get the real top idea, go take a shower, for the ideas you have in the shower will really be the top ones! | 
anil
Sunday, July 25, 2010
One idea at a time
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Hi Uncle Anil
ReplyDeleteI find it's about being happy. It's a choice one makes - to be happy or to be unhappy. If you decide to be happy, you WILL think creatively. You cannot be happy and think destructively at the same time. Therein lies the link with the shower - a warm shower will soothe and make you happy - that's where most of the singing is done!
Anna