Sunday, April 15, 2012

10 Ways to Open the Mental Locks to Creative Thinking

10 Ways to Open the Mental Locks to Creative Thinking

I wish I knew where this came from - I've used it for years in lots of classroom settings and would love to give credit to the author.

It's a good self-check - it can be sooooo easy to restrict our thinking as adults, so remember these pitfalls to getting creative....

  1. The Right Answer!
This fallacy---that there is only one correct solution to any problem---keeps us from considering other solutions and it halts our search for ideas.

  1. That’s Not Logical!
Logic is fine for the development and applications of ideas, but in the creative phase of thinking, it’s merely restrictive.  A lot of people bring practical attitudes into the creative process early on and nothing gets developed.

  1. Follow the Rules!
Most revolutionary ideas have been just that---disruptive violations of the existing principles which upset the old order.

  1. Be Practical!
In other words, stifle your imagination.  An idea killer.

  1. Avoid Ambiguity!
That is, look at any situation in only one fixed way.  Another idea killer!

  1. To Err is Wrong!
Not to err is not to experiment.  If you fail, you learn what doesn’t work and you get an opportunity to try a new approach.  If you’re not failing now and then, you not being very innovative.

  1. Play is Frivolous!
People with a playful attitude tend to come up with a lot  more ideas.

  1. That’s not MY Idea!
This is the curse of people with very sharp minds, but whose thinking is very narrow and focused, so they miss a lot of ideas.  There are good ideas all over, but it’s hard to see the dynamite idea behind by looking twice as hard in front of you.  The creative people are really hunters: they look in other areas for fresh ideas.

  1. Don’t be Foolish!
If we never tried anything that made us look ridiculous, we’d still be in caves.

  1. I’m not Creative!
The worst of the locks---a self-condemnation that diminishes talent, opportunity and intelligence.

What about you?
Do you restrict yourself by any of these mental locks?
 



7 comments:

shawn said...

Love your 10 locks. I happen to have several of them but know what they are and am working hard to break them.

Gwen Tanner said...

This is a great post and I will definitely mention it in my own blog post!! (Maybe in todays post).

Gwen

Isi Dixon said...

Great list of how not to be creative. Most of our teachers have a lot to answer for.

Laura said...

This is terrifc.....I'd add "I'm not good enough" to it!

Kathi Laughman said...

Loved this! So important to check ourselves not only to make sure we aren't limiting our own options but also that we aren't limiting those of others. Great post.

Christine Mann said...

Thank you all for the great comments! I have to pull this one out frequently - maybe everyone should read it before we ever to into a meeting - or teach a class!

Heather Waring said...

Yes, so many things stifle our creativity. I believe that we need to learn to play again or play more.