MASTERING CREATIVITY, 1st Edition
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From James Clear:
For most of my
life, I didn't consider myself to be particularly creative. I didn't play a musical instrument (or even know
how to read music). I wasn't skilled at drawing
or painting, or really anything that involved the words “arts” or “crafts.”
It wasn't until I
moved to Scotland and decided to buy a camera to “take some pictures while I'm over there” that I
discovered that creativity was something that could be developed. Over the next year, I took more than 100,000
photos.
Fast forward to today and I pursue creative tasks all of the time. Every
Monday and Thursday, I publish a
new article on JamesClear.com and display creativity as a writer. Occasionally, I'll add some hand-drawn images to those articles.
And, of course, I'm still bouncing around the world taking photos and
trying to tell compelling stories as a photographer.
I'm not sure
what your creative goals are, but I am sure that you can make progress towards them. I wrote Mastering Creativity to share the
lessons I've learned and to express
one simple truth about creativity: you have brilliance inside of you, but only if you can find the guts and
grit to pull it out of yourself.
Let's get to
it...
10 THINGS THIS GUIDE WILL TEACH YOU
1.
How to overcome the mental
blocks that prevent
creativity.
2.
How to be creative, even if it's not natural for you.
3. How to make time for
creative work if you're busy.
4. How the world's greatest artists approach the task of
creating.
5. How to make creating a consistent habit.
6. Why smart people should create things.
7. One simple trick that
makes it easier to be creative.
8. How to stay motivated over the long run.
9. Why it is important to generate
a lot of work to find your
creativity.
10. And most importantly, how
to make these ideas a habit in
real life.
How to Find Your Hidden Creative Genius
There is a
interesting story about how Pablo Picasso, the famous Spanish artist, developed the ability to produce remarkable work in just minutes.
As the story
goes, Picasso was walking though the market one day when a woman spotted him. She stopped the artist,
pulled out a piece of paper and said,
“Mr. Picasso, I am a fan of your work. Please, could you do a little drawing for me?”
Picasso smiled and
quickly drew a small, but beautiful piece of art on the paper. Then, he handed the paper back to her
saying, “That will be one million dollars.”
“But Mr.
Picasso,” the woman said. “It only took you thirty seconds to draw this little masterpiece.”
“My good woman,”
Picasso said, “It took me thirty years to draw that masterpiece in thirty seconds.” [1]
Picasso isn’t the
only brilliant creative who worked for decades to master his craft. His journey is typical of many
creative geniuses. Even people of considerable talent rarely produce
incredible work before
decades of practice.
Let’s talk about
why that is, and even more important, how you can reveal your own creative genius.
How Creative Geniuses Come Up With Great Ideas
In 2002, Markus Zusak
sat down to write a book.
He began by
mapping out the beginning and the end of the story. Then, he started listing out chapter headings,
pages of them. Some made it into the final story, many were
cut.
When Zusak began
to write out the story itself, he tried narrating it from the perspective of Death. It didn’t
come out the way he wanted.
He re-wrote the
book, this time through the main character’s eyes. Again, something was off.
He tried writing it from an outsider’s
perspective. Still no good.
He tried present tense. He
tried past tense. Nothing. The text didn’t flow.
He revised. He
changed. He edited. By his own estimation, Zusak rewrote the first part of the book 150 to 200 times.
In the end, he went back to his original choice
and wrote it from the perspective of Death. This time—the 200th time— it felt right. When all was said and done
it had taken Zusak three years to write his
novel. He called it The Book Thief.
In an interview after his book was finally released, Zusak said, “In three years, I must have failed over a thousand times, but each failure brought me closer to
what I needed to write, and for that, I’m grateful.”
[2]
The book exploded
in popularity. It stayed on the New York Times best-seller list for over 230 weeks. It sold 8
million copies. It was translated into 40 languages.
A few years later, Hollywood came calling and turned The Book Thief into
a major motion picture.
The Simple Secret to Having Good Luck
We often think
that blockbuster successes are luck. Maybe it’s easier to explain success that way—as a chance happening, a
fortunate outlier. No doubt, there is always some element of luck involved in every success story.
But Markus Zusak
is proof that if you revise your work 200 times—if you find 200 ways to reinvent yourself, to get
better at your craft—then luck seems to have a way of finding you.
How do creative
geniuses come ups with great ideas? They work and edit and rewrite and retry and pull out their
genius through sheer force of will and perseverance. They earn the chance to be lucky
because they keep showing up.
In her Dartmouth
Commencement Address, Shonda Rimes shares a strategy that echoes Zusak’s
approach…
Dreams do not come true just because you dream them. It’s hard work that makes things happen. It’s hard work that creates change…
Ditch the dream and be a doer, not a dreamer.
Maybe you know exactly what it is you dream of being, or maybe you’re paralyzed because
you have no idea what your passion
is. The truth is, it doesn’t matter.
You don’t have to know. You just have to keep
moving forward. You just have to keep doing something,
seizing the next opportunity, staying open
to trying something new. It doesn’t have to fit your vision of the
perfect job or the perfect life.
Perfect is boring and dreams are not real. Just … do.
So you think, “I
wish I could travel.” Great. Sell your crappy car, buy a ticket to Bangkok, and go. Right now. I’m serious.
You want to be a writer? A writer is someone who writes every day, so start writing.
How Creativity Works
We all have some
type of creative genius inside of us. The only way to release it is to work on it.
No single act
will uncover more creative powers than forcing yourself to create consistently. For Markus Zusak that meant
writing and re-writing 200 times. For
you, it might mean singing a song over and over until it sounds right. Or programming a piece of software until all
the bugs are out, taking portraits of your
friends until the lighting is perfect, or caring for the customers you serve until you know them better than they know
themselves. You can make any job a work of art if you put the right energy into
it.
How do creative geniuses come up with great ideas? They
work hard at it.
How to Uncover Your Creative
Talent by Using the “Equal Odds Rule”
Paul Erdos
was a strange man. He lived out of two suitcases, never learned how to
cook his own meals, worked up to 19 hours per day, took amphetamines daily and washed them down with caffeine,
and gave away nearly all of the money that he earned. [3]
Erdos was also
the most prolific mathematician of the 20th century. He wrote or co-authored over 1,500 mathematical
articles during his career and partnered
with over 500 different collaborators. As you would expect, his contributions to mathematics were
significant.
Erdos solved a
variety of difficult problems. He worked out a proof for the prime number theorem. He led the
development of Ramsey theory. He discovered
the proof for a difficult mathematical riddle known as Bertrand’s postulate. Long story short, Erdos was
good. He worked his tail off and advanced
the field of mathematics because of it.
And yet, do you
know what became of the vast majority of his 1,500 articles and papers?
Nothing. They are
long gone. Forgotten. Tucked away in the archives of an old research journal or filed into a box at
the bottom of some math lover’s closet. And
that is why the story of Paul Erdos is perhaps the best example of what is known as
the Equal Odds Rule.
Let’s talk about
what this rule means and how it can help you uncover your creative talent.
The Equal Odds Rule
In 1977, a
Harvard-trained psychologist named Keith Simonton, developed a theory
that he called the Equal Odds
Rule.
“The Equal Odds
Rule says that the average publication of any particular scientist does not have any statistically different chance of
having more of an impact than any
other scientist’s average publication.” [4] In other words, any given scientist is equally likely to
create a game-changing piece of work as they
are to create something
average that is quickly forgotten.
Translated to the
world at-large: You can’t predict your own success. Scientists, artists, inventors, writers,
entrepreneurs, and workers of all types are equally likely to produce a
useless project as they are to produce an
important one.
If you believe
the Equal Odds Rule, then the natural conclusion is that you’re playing a numbers game. Because you can’t
predict your success, the best strategy
is to produce as much work as possible, which will provide more opportunities to hit the bullseye and create something meaningful. [5]
I’ve seen the Equal
Odds Rule at play
in my own work each month. I write new articles
every Monday and Thursday. I know that if I write a new article every Monday and Thursday, then that will be
about 8 or 9 articles per month on average.
And if I write 8 or 9 articles per month, then 2 or 3 of them will be decent.
Which 2 or 3 will be winners? I have no idea.
After sticking to
this schedule for almost two years, it has become very clear to me that I am a rather terrible judge of my
own work. All I can do is try my best each
time, commit to doing a volume of work, and trust if I stick with the process
then something useful
will find it’s way from my hands
to the keyboard.
The Willingness
to Create Garbage
Paul Erdos knew
something that all great creators eventually discover: Creative genius only reveals itself after you’ve
shown up enough times to get the average ideas
out of the way. Time after time, problem after problem, Erdos kept working on his craft. 1,500 papers later,
it turns out he had some pretty good ideas.
If you want to extract
your creative genius and make a difference, then embracing idea behind the Equal Odds Rule is a useful strategy.
Sometimes you’ll create something
good. Sometimes you’ll create something useless. But no matter what, you should always be creating.
If you want to
make a masterpiece, you have to be willing to create a little garbage along the way.
The Myth of Creative Inspiration
Franz Kafka is
considered one of the most creative and influential writers of the 20th century, but he actually spent most
of his time working as a lawyer for the Workers
Accident Insurance Institute. How did Kafka produce such fantastic creative
works while holding down his day job?
By sticking to a strict
schedule.
He would go to
his job from 8:30 AM to 2:30 PM, eat lunch and then take a long nap until 7:30 PM, exercise and eat
dinner with his family in the evening, and
then begin writing at 11 PM for a few hours each night before going to bed and doing
it all over again.
Kafka is hardly unique in
his commitment to a schedule.
As Mason Currey notes in his
popular book, Daily Rituals: How Artists Work, many of the world’s great artists follow a consistent
schedule.
Maya Angelou rented a local hotel room
and went there to write. She arrived at
6:30 AM, wrote until 2 PM, and then went home to do some editing. She never slept at the hotel.
Pulitzer Prize winner
Michael Chabon writes five nights per week from 10 PM to 3 AM.
Haruki Murakami
wakes up at 4
AM, writes for five hours,
and then goes for
a
run.
The work of top
creatives isn’t dependent upon motivation or inspiration, but rather it follows a consistent pattern
and routine. It’s the mastering of daily habits that leads to creative success, not some
mythical spark of genius.
Here’s why…
Daily Routines
William James,
the famous psychologist, is noted for saying that habits and schedules are important because they
“free our minds to advance to really interesting fields of action.”
An article in The
Guardian agreed by saying, “If you waste resources trying to decide when or where to work, you’ll
impede your capacity to do the work.” And
there are plenty of research studies on willpower and motivation to back up that
statement.
In other words,
if you’re serious about creating something compelling, you need to stop waiting for motivation and
inspiration to strike you and simply set a
schedule for doing work on a consistent basis. Of course, that’s easy to say, but much harder to do in practice.
Here’s one way of thinking
about schedules that may help...
Permission to Create
Junk
Weightlifting offers a
good metaphor for scheduling
creative work.
I can’t predict
whether or not I’ll set a PR (personal record) before I go to the gym. In fact, there will be many days when
I’ll have a below average workout. Eventually,
I figured out that those below average days were just part of the process. The only way to actually lift
bigger weights was to continually show up every
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday — regardless of whether any individual workout
was good or bad.
Creative work is
no different than training in the gym. You can’t selectively choose your best moments and only work on
the days when you have great ideas.
The only way to unveil the great ideas inside of you is to go through a volume
of work, put in your repetitions, and show up over and
over again.
Obviously, doing
something below average is never the goal. But you have to give yourself permission to grind through
the occasional days of below average work because it’s the price you have to pay to
get to excellent work.
If you’re
anything like me, you hate creating something that isn’t excellent. It’s easy to start judging your work and
convince yourself to not share something, not
publish something, and not ship something because “this isn’t good enough yet.”
But the
alternative is even worse: if you don’t have a schedule forcing you to deliver, then it’s really easy to avoid
doing the work at all. The only way to be consistent
enough to make a masterpiece is to give yourself permission to create junk along the way.
The Schedule
is the System
During a
conversation about writing, my friend Sarah Peck looked at me and said, “A lot of people never get around
to writing because they are always wondering when they are going to write next.”
You could say the
same thing about working out, starting a business, creating art, and building most habits. The
schedule is the system that makes your goals
a reality. If you don’t set a schedule for yourself, then your only
option is to rely on motivation.
If your workout
doesn’t have a time when it usually occurs, then each day you’ll wake up
thinking, “I hope I feel motivated to exercise today.”
If your business
doesn’t have a system for marketing, then you’ll show up at work crossing your fingers that you’ll
find a way to get the word out (in addition
to everything else you have
to do).
If you don’t have
a time block to write every week, then you’ll find yourself saying
things like, “I just need to find the willpower to do it.”
Stop waiting for
motivation or inspiration to strike you and set a schedule for your habits.
The
Difference Between Professionals and Amateurs
Last summer, I was speaking with a man named Todd Henry. Todd is a successful author and does a great job
of putting out valuable work on a consistent
basis.
I, on the other
hand, do a remarkable job of putting out questionable work on an inconsistent
basis. I started to explain this
to Todd…
“Todd, what do
you think about writing only when you
feel motivated? I feel like I always do my best work when I get a
spark of creativity or inspiration, but that
only happens every now and then. I’m pretty much only writing when I feel like it, which means I’m inconsistent.
But if I write all the time, then I’m not creating my best work.”
“That’s cool,”
Todd replied. “I only write when I’m motivated too. I just happened
to be motivated every day at 8am.”
The Difference Between
Professionals and Amateurs
It doesn’t matter
what you are trying to become better at, if you only do the work when you’re motivated, then you’ll
never be consistent enough to become a
professional.
The ability to
show up everyday, stick to the schedule, and do the work — especially when you don’t feel like it —
is so valuable that it is literally all you
need to become better 99% of
the time.
I’ve seen this in my own
experiences…
When I don’t miss workouts, I get in the best shape of my life. When I
write every week, I become a better
writer. When I travel and take my camera out
every day, I take
better photos.
It’s simple and powerful. But
why is it so difficult?
The Pain of Being A Pro
Approaching your
goals — whatever they are — with the attitude of a professional isn’t
easy. In fact, being a pro is painful.
The simple fact
of the matter is that most of the time we are inconsistent. We have goals that we would like to achieve
and dreams that we would like to fulfill,
but we only work towards them occasionally; when we feel inspired or motivated or when life allows us to do so. It’s just easier that
way.
I can guarantee
that if you set a schedule for any task and start sticking to it, there will be days when you feel like
quitting. When you start a business, there will
be days when you don’t feel like showing up. When you’re at the gym, there will be sets that you don’t feel like
finishing. When it’s time to write, there will
be reports that you don’t feel like typing. But stepping up when it’s
annoying or painful or draining to do so, that’s what makes you a pro.
Professionals
stick to the schedule, amateurs let life get in the way. Professionals know what is important to them and work towards it
with purpose, amateurs get pulled off course by the urgencies of life.
You’ll Never Regret Starting Important Work
Some people might
think I’m promoting the benefits of being a workaholic. “Professionals work harder than everyone else and that’s why
they’re great.” Actually, that’s not it at all.
Being a pro is
about having the discipline to commit to what is important to you instead
of merely saying something is important to you. It’s about starting
when you feel like stopping, not because you want to work more, but
because your goal is important enough
to you that you don’t simply work on it when it’s convenient. Becoming a
pro is about making your priorities a reality.
There have been a
lot of sets that I haven’t felt like finishing, but I’ve never regretted doing the workout. There have
been a lot of articles I haven’t felt like writing,
but I’ve never regretted publishing on schedule. There have been a lot of days I’ve felt like relaxing, but
I’ve never regretted showing up and working on something that is important to me.
Becoming a pro
doesn’t mean you’re a workaholic. It means that you’re good at making time for what matters to you —
especially when you don’t feel like it — instead of playing the role of the victim and letting life happen to you.
How to Become a Pro
Going about your
work like a pro isn’t easy, but it’s also not as complicated or difficult as you might think. There
are three steps.
1. Decide what you
want to be good at.
Purpose is
everything. If you know what you want, then getting it is much easier. This sounds simple, but in my
experience even people who are smart, creative, and talented rarely
know exactly what they are working for and why.
2. Set a schedule for your actions.
Once you know what you want, set a schedule for actually doing it.
Note: Don’t make
the same mistake I have made, which is setting a schedule based on results. Don’t map out how much
weight you want to lose each week or
how much money you want to make. “Lose 5 pounds” is not an action you can perform. “Do three sets of squats” is an action
you can perform.
You want to set a
schedule based on actions you can do, not results that you want.
1.
Stick to your schedule
for one week.
Stop thinking
about how hard it will be to follow a schedule for a month or a year. Just follow it for this week. For
the next 7 days, don’t let distractions get
in the way.
Setting a
schedule doesn’t make you a professional, following it does. Don’t be a writer, be writing. Don’t be a lifter, be
lifting. For one week, do the things you want to do without letting life get in the way.
Next week, start again.
The Power of the
Schedule
Ira Glass is the
host of the popular radio show This American Life, which is broadcast to 1.7 million listeners each
week. This is the advice Glass gives to anyone
looking to interesting, creative work: “The most important thing you can do is do a lot of work. Do a huge
volume of work. Put yourself on a deadline so
that every week or every month you know you’re going to finish one story. It is only by going through a volume of work
that … the work you’re making will be as good as your ambitions.” [6]
If you want to do
your best creative work, then don’t leave it up to choice. Don’t wake up in the morning and think, “I hope
I feel inspired to create something today.”
You need to take the decision-making out of it. Set a schedule for your work. Genius arrives when you show up
enough times to get the average ideas out
of the way.
The Weird Strategy Dr. Seuss
Used to Create His Greatest Work
In 1960, two men made a bet.
There was only
$50 on the line, but millions of people would feel the impact of this little wager.
The first man,
Bennett Cerf, was the founder of the publishing firm, Random House. The second man was named Theo
Geisel, but you probably know him as Dr.
Seuss. Cerf proposed the bet and challenged that Dr. Seuss would not be able to
write an entertaining children’s book using
only 50 different words.
Dr. Seuss took
the bet and won. The result was a little book called Green Eggs and Ham. Since publication, Green Eggs and
Ham has sold more than 200 million
copies, making it the most popular of Seuss’s works and one of the best- selling
children’s books in history.
At first glance,
you might think this was a lucky fluke. A talented author plays a fun game with 50 words and ends up
producing a hit. But there is actually more
to this story and the lessons in it can help us become more creative and
stick to better habits over the long-run.
Here’s what we can learn from
Dr. Seuss…
The Power of Constraints
What Dr. Seuss
discovered through this little bet was the power of setting constraints.
Setting limits
for yourself — whether that involves the time you have to work out, the money you have to start a
business, or the number of words you can use in a book — often delivers better
results than “keeping
your options open.”
In fact, Dr.
Seuss found that setting some limits to work within was so useful that he employed this strategy for other
books as well. For example, The Cat in the Hat was written using only a first-grade
vocabulary list.
In my experience,
I’ve seen that constraints can also provide benefits in health, business, and life in general. I’ve noticed two reasons why this occurs.
1. Constraints inspire
your creativity.
If you’re five
foot five inches tall and you’re playing basketball, you figure out more creative
ways to score than the six foot five
inch guy.
If you have a
one-year-old child that takes up almost every minute of your day, you figure
out more creative ways to get some exercise.
If you’re a photographer and you show up to a shoot with just one lens,
then you figure out more creative
ways to capture the beauty of your subject than you would with all of your gear available.
Limitations drive you to figure out
solutions. Your constraints inspire your
creativity.
1.
Constraints force you to get something
done.
Time constraints
have forced me to produce some of my best work. This is especially true with my writing. Every Monday and Thursday, I
write a new article — even
if it’s inconvenient.
This constraint
has led me to produce some of my most popular work in unlikely places. When I was sitting in the passenger seat on a
road trip through West Virginia, I
wrote an article. When I was visiting family for the 4th of July, I wrote an article. When I spent all day
flying in and out of airports, I wrote an article.
Without my
schedule (the constraint), I would have pushed those articles to a different day. Or never got around to them
at all. Constraints force you to get something
done and don’t allow you to procrastinate. This is why I believe that professionals set a schedule for their
production while amateurs wait until they feel motivated.
What constraints
are you setting for yourself? What type of schedule do you have for
your goals?
Related note:
Sticking to your schedule doesn’t have to be grand or impressive. Just commit
to a process you can sustain. And if
you have to, reduce the scope.
Constraints are Not the
Enemy
So often we spend time
complaining about the things that are withheld from us.
“I don’t have enough time to work out.”
“I don’t have enough money to start a business.” “I can’t
eat this food on my diet.”
But constraints
are not the enemy. Every artist has a limited set of tools to work with. Every athlete has a limited set of
skills to train with. Every entrepreneur has
a limited amount of resources to build with. Once you know your constraints, you can start figuring out how to work with them.
The Size
of Your Canvas
Dr. Seuss was
given 50 words. That was the size of his canvas. His job was to see what
kind of picture he could paint with those
words.
You and I are given
similar constraints in our lives.
You only have 30
minutes to fit a workout into your day? So be it. That’s the size of your canvas. Your job is to see if
you can make those 30 minutes a work of art.
You can only
spare 15 minutes each day to write? That’s the size of your canvas. Your job
is to make each paragraph a work
of art.
You only have
$100 to start your business? Great. That’s the size of your canvas.
Your job is to make each sales
call a work of art.
There are a lot
of authors who would complain about writing a book with only 50 words. But there was one author who
decided to take the tools he had available and make a work of art instead.
We all have
constraints in our lives. The limitations just determine the size of the canvas
you have to work with. What you paint on it is up to you.
How to Be Motivated to Create Consistently
Twyla Tharp was
born in Indiana and was named after the local “Pig Princess” at the
Annual Muncie Fair, who went by Twila.
It wasn’t the prettiest of
starts, but Tharp turned it into something
beautiful.
She is widely
regarded as one of the greatest dancers and choreographers of the modern era. She has toured across the
globe performing her original work. She is
credited with choreographing the first crossover ballet and she has choreographed dances for the Paris Opera
Ballet, The Royal Ballet, New York City
Ballet, Boston Ballet, and many others. Her work has appeared on Broadway, on television, and in films. In
1992, she was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship, often called the “Genius Grant”, for her creative work.
To put it simply: Twyla Tharp is prolific. The question is, how does she do it?
The Power of Ritual
In her
best-selling book, The Creative Habit, Tharp
discusses one of the secrets of her
success:
I begin each day of my life with a ritual; I wake up
at 5:30 A.M., put on my workout
clothes, my leg warmers,
my sweatshirts, and my hat. I walk outside my Manhattan home, hail a taxi, and tell the
driver to take me to the Pumping Iron
gym at 91st street and First Avenue,
where I workout for two hours. The ritual is not the stretching and weight training
I put my body through
each morning at the gym; the ritual is the cab. The moment I tell the driver where to go I
have completed the ritual.
It’s a simple act, but doing it the same way each
morning habitualizes it — makes it
repeatable, easy to do. It reduces
the chance that I would skip it or do it differently. It is one more item in my arsenal of routines, and one less thing
to think about.
Let’s talk about
what makes Tharp’s morning ritual so important and how we can use
it to master our own habits.
The Surprising Thing
About Motivation
If you have
trouble sticking to good habits or fall victim to bad ones, then it can be easy to assume that you simply need to
learn how to get motivated or that you don’t understand how willpower works.
But here is the
surprising thing about motivation: it often comes after starting a new behavior, not before. Getting started
is a form of active inspiration that naturally produces
momentum.
You have probably experienced this phenomenon before.
For example, going
for a run may
seem overwhelming or exhausting just to think about before you begin, but if you can muster up the energy
to start jogging, you’ll often find that you
become more motivated to finish as you go. In other words, it’s easier to finish the
run than it was to start it in the
first place.
This is basically
Newton’s First Law applied to habit formation: objects in motion tend to stay in motion. And that
means getting started is the hardest part.
I often find this
to be true with my articles. Once I begin writing, it’s much easier for me to power through and finish.
However, if I’m staring at a blank page, it can seem overwhelming and taxing to
take the first step.
And this, my
friends, is where Twyla Tharp’s morning ritual comes back into the picture.
Rituals Are an On Ramp for
Your Behavior
The power of a
ritual, or what I like to call a pre-game routine, is that it provides a mindless way to initiate your
behavior. It makes starting your habits easier and that means following through on a consistent basis is easier.
Habits researchers
agree. Benjamin Gardner, a researcher in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at
University College London recently published
a paper in the Health Psychology Review that
covered how we can use habits to initiate longer, more complex routines:
A ‘habitual’ bicycle commuter, for example, may automatically opt to use a bicycle
rather than alternative
transport (so automatically enacting the first
behaviour in a superordinate ‘bicycle
commuting’ sequence, such as putting on a cycle helmet), but
negotiating the journey may require higher-level cognitive input.
In other words,
getting started with a simple ritual like putting on a helmet or checking the air in the bike tires makes
it easier to follow through on the bigger behavior
(making the commute). If you focus on the ritual, the next step follows more automatically.
Twyla Tharp’s
morning routine is a perfect example of this idea in practice. Naturally, there are going to be days when
she doesn’t feel like getting out of bed
and exercising. There are bound to be times when the thought of starting the day
with a two-hour workout seems
exhausting.
But her ritual of
waking up and calling the taxi takes the emotion, motivation, and decision-making out of the process.
Her brain doesn’t need to waste any energy
deciding what to do next. She doesn’t have a debate with herself about what the first step should be. She simply
follows the same pattern that she always
does. And once the pattern is in motion, the rest of the sequence follows more easily.
The key to any
good ritual is that it removes the need to make a decision: What should I do first? When should I do
this? How should I do this? Most people never
get moving because they can’t decide how to get started. Having a ritual takes that
burden off your shoulders.
The Idea
in Practice
Here are some
other examples of how you can apply ritual and routine to your habits
and behaviors:
•
Exercise more consistently:
Use the same warm up routine in the gym
•
Become more creative: Follow a creative ritual before
you start writing or painting or singing
•
Start each day stress free: Create a five-minute
morning meditation ritual
•
Sleep better: Follow a
“power down” routine before bed
Whatever it is,
make it your own. Use your ritual as an on-ramp for the bigger behavior and habits you want to build
into your life. When you master the ability
to mindlessly initiate the tasks that are important to you, it’s not necessary
to rely on motivation and willpower to make them happen.
Where can you use a ritual or
routine to help you create more consistently?
Smart People Should
Create Things
It was 1974 and
Art Fry was spending his weekend singing for the local church choir. On this particular Sunday, Fry was
dealing with a relatively boring problem: he couldn’t keep his bookmarks in place.
In order to find
hymns quickly, Fry would stick little pieces of paper between the pages like bookmarks. The only problem
was that every time he stood up, the
pieces of paper would slide down deep between the pages or fall out of the book completely. Annoyed by the constant
placing and replacing of his bookmarks, Fry started daydreaming about a better
solution.
“It was during
the sermon,” Fry said, “that I first thought, ‘What I really need is a little bookmark that will stick to the
paper but will not tear the paper when I remove
it.’” [7]
With this idea in
mind, Fry went back to work the next week and began developing a solution to his bookmark problem. As luck would
have it, Fry happened to be working
at the perfect company. He was an employee at 3M and one of his
co-workers, Spencer Silver, was an adhesives specialist.
Over the next few
months, Fry and Silver developed a piece of paper that would stick
to a page, but could be
easily removed and reapplied over and over.
Eventually, this
little project became one of the best-selling office supplies of all-time: the Post-It Note.
Today, 3M sells
Post-It Notes in over 100 countries worldwide. You can find them at libraries and schools, in offices
and boardrooms, and scattered around nearly every workspace in between.
What can we learn
from the story of Art Fry? And is there something we can take away from this
to make our lives and the world better?
Create Something Small
Art Fry wasn’t
trying to create a best-selling office supply product. In the beginning, Fry was simply trying to design
a better bookmark for his choir hymnal. He was just trying to create something
small.
For a long time,
I thought that if I wasn’t working on something incredible, then it wasn’t of much value. But
gradually I discovered the truth: the most important
thing isn’t to create something world-changing, but simply to create. You don’t
have to build something famous to
build something meaningful.
And this brings
us to the most important lesson we can learn from Art Fry and his Post-It Notes: when the world
presents you with something interesting or frustrating or curious, choose
to do something about it. Choose to be a creator.
In other words,
the world needs smart people to build things. We need employees who invent things, entrepreneurs who create things,
and freelancers who design things.
We need secretaries who make jewelry as a side project and stay-at-home dads who write amazing
novels. We need more leaders, not more followers. We need
more creators, not more
consumers.
And perhaps the most important
thing to realize is that we not only need to
create for each
other, but for ourselves as well. Creating something is the perfect way to avoid wasting the precious
moments that we have been given. To contribute,
to create, to chip in to the world around you and to add your line to the world’s
story — that is a life well lived.
What will you create
today?
The Next
Step: Where to Go From Here
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