So I described this thing about neurons and connections and wiring... and how the wiring makes a difference.
The question is, do we have control over how information moves through all those neurons across all those connections?
The answer is yes.
Here's my testimony:
Off the top of my head, I have two examples.
One is a straight up neurons that fire together wire together deal. The second is an example of diffuse thinking.
Okay.
So one of my Go-To Full Court Press moves for tapping more creative ability than I'm consciously packing is to engage in focused, sustained work on a particular creative challenge for a number of days. After that, ideas start popping into my consciousness.
Good ideas.
The most recent example is a play I'm writing then set aside. I got most of it started through straight up conscious imagination. Once I was into it, though, ideas began to appear.
Good ones.
There are lots of ways to think about this, by the way. Muse is the most common. I think of mine as a red vault tucked into the floor of a massive cathedral somewhere deep inside my brain. I know stuff goes in there. Things I experience. Things I learn. Whatever I intentionally send in there.
And I definitely know what comes out. The stuff that magically appears in my conscious awareness.
But inside that vault?
I have no idea.
I have no clue what happens in there.
I just know I'm continuously grateful for the gifts that flow from it.
Okay. So I set the play I was writing aside because, well, because there was no deadline.
By the way I do much, much better with deadlines. I won't lie.
Then maybe a year later I think it's stupid to just stop like that so I pulled out the work I'd already done, read through it from front to back, and then started tweaking, expanding, and creating.
And after a few days of that?
Yup. You guessed it.
Ideas started showing up on my mental front porch again.
Good ones.
Out of the blue. At times I wasn't even working on the play. Once, ideas even showed up while I was driving.
That line, by the way, neurons that fire together wire together, also describes building up muscle through daily exercise. It also describes what happens to those muscles when you stop exercising. Not wire together. So my process, essentially, this process is intended to beef up a specific neutral network to the point where it does some crazy heavy lifting for me. And then when I stop putting in the work... it stops putting in the work.
Booooo, but...
I get it.
😕
The second example from my creative experience is called diffuse thinking.
It's a way of thinking that I tap into by going for a walk, engaging some activity while at the same time considering some creative challenge that's on my plate.
Diffuse thinking is different from blunt force intentional problem solving that activates a particular neural network. Diffuse thinking activates neurons in disparate parts of the brain because now the brain's directing and coordinating some other activity. So sending a thing to consider into that mental machinery at work necessitates something that reminds me of a roundabout detour. It's certainly not straightforward linear thinking. My thoughts seem to go places of which I can't be aware because I'm doing something physical that also must be attended to. So in-between those times when I'm aware that I'm thinking, my thoughts slip from my conscious awareness and, next thing I know, I'm making progress with some new ideas, some new elements with which to play, some new strategy or even the next little bit of what I'm working on.
I used this method the most over the last two years. Intentionally, that is. Because if this is a project that involves and engages me for more than a few days, I start waking up with ideas. You see, it turns out, I actually have a night shift.
Huzzah!
And yes. I have to write down whatever it is I wake up with. Like, right away. I have to write it down immediately or else it disappears, vanishes in the air like smoke.
But man.
Good stuff.
😁
Hmmm.
I actually just thought of one other way I go about thinking... now that I'm into this a bit.
Tomorrow, then...











