HABITS THAT BLOCK CREATIVITY
Becoming more creative is not easy. Habits must be broken, perspectives changed, and thought patterns revised. Nevertheless, the results can be well worth the effort. Here are some reasons why it is difficult for most of us to be creative at all times.
It is a common myth
that creativity declines with age
beginning around the age of 11 or 12. It is also a
myth that creativity also declines as education
increases. These myths convey some idea that age and
learning are obstacles to creative problem solving. This
is not so it is just that as we gain experience and learning we develop more efficient tools for
dealing with our daily activities.
The Known Vs. The New
The simplest definition of creativity is, the ability to come up with new or unique ideas. Ideas do not have to be new to the world, just new to us. Because two or more people happen to make the same discovery or develop the same invention does not change the fact that each of them had to be creative to discover or invent the system independently.
Unfortunately,
routine everyday decision-making works
against searching for or accepting new ideas. In
attempting to exercise good judgement and not make
mistakes, people usually base their decisions on the best,
most complete, and most accurate information or
experience available. These habits allow us to deal with most situations without difficulty or
trauma. Unfortunately, such high-caliber information exists only about what is established,
common, and known. The newer and more unique the solution required, the harder it is to get
good and sufficient information. That is why the easiest solutions are not new and different.
Creative solutions by their very nature must be new or different.
Obstacles To Creativity
The process of creating a new idea involves combining existing elements into original combinations. An example is Watson Watt's invention of Radar. All the elements, radio waves, amplifiers and oscilloscopes existed and were known to him. Nevertheless, he combined these elements into a new system and turned them into hardware. Once Watt succeeded, radar became just another of the "givens" from which newer systems and applications would be developed.
To unleash the creative process, much of what is usually known and taken for granted, must be looked at in a different way, for a new purpose. Here are some of the most basic obstacles that must be overcome:
Habits
Restrict Awareness:
Habits are good in that they are efficient and conserve our mental energies for other tasks. However, habitual behavior can lead to a kind of blindness. One of the chief roadblocks to creativity stems from the physical, perceptual, and mental habits that we build up over time. Such habits tend to tune out those things and ideas around us that could be the basis for new insights,
Rigid Categories Prevent Insight:
We see the world selectively through a set of filters created by our experiences. These filters
superimpose constraints on a problem that are not there. To find creative solutions we must
discard our normal filtered perceptions and try a wholly new approach.
We begin life with essentially no experience or information. The solution to every problem is creative. We learn by interacting with our environment. This learning process fills our heads with raw data, which we organize into rules, mental pigeonholes. Each pigeonhole is the repository for a class of experience and/or information. Each pigeonhole is identified as good, if it leads to desirable results, or bad if it does not. Soon our first instinct when faced with a situation is to try to fit it into an existing pigeonhole.
Wanting to fit new things into existing categories increases as we gain experience. Note the response of someone exposed to something new. They will probably start out saying, that it is the same as something they already know. If they are told it is not, they may take several tries at establishing an identification based on similarity with something they know. If they are unable to do so, they may satisfy his need for mental equilibrium by saying: "Well, it is close enough." If they are open minded enough, they may accept it as totally new to them, and not fitting into a preexisting pigeonhole. They create a completely new category to reside beside the preexisting ones.
As we learn to cope with everyday living we learn to operate on automatic because we find it efficient and comfortable. We develop enough pigeonholes to get us through life, and we become reluctant to crowd in new ones. The net-effect is that even when exposed to something new, we try to treat it like something familiar, and immediately assume it belongs in an existing category.
There are several other creativity restraint mechanisms. For example, somewhere along the way we stop asking what we think are stupid questions. We somehow don't want to seem foolish and are afraid to show our ignorance. This tendency seems to increase as one's educational credentials increase. We are afraid to be laughed at or rebuffed.
Being different is difficult, to march to the beat of a different drummer. Our social instinct makes us want to belong to the group. Maintaining a view when those around you disagree with it is hard. Many psychological experiments have demonstrated that individuals may deny their own senses to make their judgements conform to what the overwhelming number of people in their group say or believe.
Most of these mechanisms are useful when it comes to getting us through life on a day-by-day basis. However, when the time comes to be creative, we must change the way we think and function. We must recognize these blocks to new ideas, for what they are and move beyond them.
Overcoming the Obstacles
The first step to becoming a more creative individual is to understand what conceptual blocks are and how they interfere with our ability to think about things in a new way. A conceptual block is a mind set that prevents a person from seeing a problem or a solution in an unconventional way. The most frequently occurring conceptual blocks are perceptual blocks, emotional blocks, cultural blocks, environmental blocks and communication blocks.
Many of these perceptual Blocks reveal themselves by "killer phrases," phrases that stop consideration any other solutions or of the problem itself. When these phrases surface, it is valuable to stop and think about the conceptual block that must overcome. Some typical killer phrases are:
Strategies for creative problem solving must include steps to overcome and avoid perceptual blocks. Some means of overcoming these blocks are: