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Creativity can be defined as both the art and the science of thinking and behaving with both subjectivity (feelings) and objectivity (facts).
Creativity is being whole, knowing you have feelings; of alternating back and forth between what we sense, what we can know, and what we already know.
Becoming more creative involves waking up to a state of wholeness.
A state of wholeness differs from the primarily objective or subjective person common to our society.
For example:
An objective person, most typical, being a knower of facts, briefly senses the surrounding natural and man-made environment, then determines the existence of logic and beauty within that experience.
The primarily subjective person, a more rare species, being a here-and-now, sense-response mechanism, delights on sensory experience (things that make you feel) and cares little for fixed conclusions.
To combine these two states is gaining more than both.
A more natural and conscious balance between the two extremes. Such creative wholeness allows us to see ourselves from above...
To both lead the way AND follow that way.
To determine our goal and go.
To design the stimulus and experience the response.
Wholeness requires you to sit centered, thinking in one hand, feeling in the other, to control the mind.
Do what you love...
Why Creative People Sometimes Make No Sense
Posted by Matthew in for us
Mihaly describes 9 contradictory traits that are frequently present in creative people:
01
Most creative people have a great deal of physical energy, but are often quiet and at rest. They can work long hours at great concentration.
02
Most creative people tend to be smart and naive at the same time. “It involves fluency, or the ability to generate a great quantity of ideas; flexibility, or the ability to switch from one perspective to another; and originality in picking unusual associations of ideas. These are the dimensions of thinking that most creativity tests measure, and that most creativity workshops try to enhance.”
03
Most creative people combine both playfulness and productivity, which can sometimes mean both responsibility and irresponsibility. “Despite the carefree air that many creative people affect, most of them work late into the night and persist when less driven individuals would not.” Usually this perseverance occurs at the expense of other responsibilities, or other people.
04
Most creative people alternate fluently between imagination and fantasy, and a rooted sense of reality. In both art and science, movement forward involves a leap of imagination, a leap into a world that is different from our present. Interestingly, this visionary imagination works in conjunction with a hyperawareness of reality. Attention to real details allows a creative person to imagine ways to improve them.
05
Most creative people tend to be both introverted and extroverted. Many people tend toward one extreme or the other, but highly creative people are a balance of both simultaneously.
06
Most creative people are genuinely humble and display a strong sense of pride at the same time.
07
Most creative people are both rebellious and conservative. “It is impossible to be creative without having first internalized an area of culture. So it’s difficult to see how a person can be creative without being both traditional and conservative and at the same time rebellious and iconoclastic.”
08
Most creative people are very passionate about their work, but remain extremely objective about it as well. They are able to admit when something they have made is not very good.
09
Most creative people’s openness and sensitivity exposes them to a large amount of suffering and pain, but joy and life in the midst of that suffering. “Perhaps the most important quality, the one that is most consistently present in all creative individuals, is the ability to enjoy the process of creation for its own sake. Without this trait, poets would give up striving for perfection and would write commercial jingles, economists would work for banks where they would earn at least twice as much as they do at universities, and physicists would stop doing basic research and join industrial laboratories where the conditions are better and the expectations more predictable.”
It all makes so much sense now!
Read more here