| It
may surprise you, but the answer is "No."
(Hang on though for the
reason. Read this column before proceeding to the second column to the right.)
Pretend for a moment that you
live on an isolated island where there are no modern conveniences such as television,
phones, faxes, computers, books, etc. However, you have an extremely fine set of art
supplies (presumably left there in previous years by a passing trade ship.)
You've always liked to paint
scenes from your island ... the birds, trees, people, clouds, etc. Finally, you decide
you need a new challenge so you go into a deep meditation and you see a vision. Its
beauty and power excite you and you work on your painting for days and weeks in a
joyful frenzy.
Finally it's finished and
you show it to your friends and family. They are stunned and call you a creative genius.
The painting is hung in the most prominent place on the island and people start calling
you to paint pictures for them. You become rich and famous ... at least on your island.
One day, a ship lands and some
people come ashore and happen by where your painting hangs. You step closer, eagerly
anticipating their acclaim, then you hear, "Hey, look! Someone has copied the Mona
Lisa."
- What happens to your status
as a creative genius? (It probably plummeted with the islanders and never existed
at all with the visitors.)
- Did it have anything to do
with you as a talented artist or original thinker? (No ... it only had to do with
the viewers' perceptions of your work.)
So, when we say you're not
a creative person, it's because no one can be a creative person, he or she can only
be perceived as a creative person.
According to Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
in his new book Creativity, there are three requirements for creativity:
- Field: A field of endeavor
such as art, music, science, business, architecture, etc., which has a set of rules
or norms.
- Work: Something (book,
painting, product, etc.) which goes beyond the rules or norms of the field.
- Judges: A group of
people who know the rules and norms of the field, see the work created, and judge
it novel and worthy.
There are many ways to fail
the creativity test that have little to do with you or your work:
1. If your field doesn't
have accepted rules or norms or has rules and norms that are highly inflexible,
it's hard to be deemed creative. Street sweepers, lettuce pickers, crossing guards,
sales clerks, nurses, stock brokers, accountants, etc., have a very limited range
in which to be creative in their fields. If they move outside that range, they're
not perceived as creative, they're probably fired.
2. If your work is not
seen by the judges. We honor Da Vinci's creativity because we can see his artwork
and his drawings of helicopters and other futuristic devices. We do not recognize
the creativity of the hermit in Iowa who fills volumes of notebooks with possibly
brilliant but unread or unreadable scrawls.
3. If the judges do not
consider your work novel and worthy. This is highly subjective and time-sensitive.
The creative work of one generation may be considered quaint or passe by the next,
only to be rediscovered and praised as creative by a future set of judges.
When people talk about someone
as being "such a creative person," they are generally referring to that person's originality.
The person is always doing something new or has a certain flare about them. Originality
is an important part of creativity but it doesn't automatically make someone creative.
Only the judges who perceive the work as novel and worthy can do that.
|
It
may surprise you now, but the answer is "Yes!"
(Hang on again for the reason.
And make sure you have read the first column to the left.)
Look
around you and identify the most joyful people you know ... the people who radiate
life and goodwill. Chances are excellent that you'll find them expressing themselves
in significant ways.
You'll find:
- a teacher connecting
with students in a powerful, transforming way
- an entrepreneur working
long hours building a business
- a dancer learning a
complicated routine
- a rock climber inching
up a challenging crevass
- a parent planning a
birthday party
- a lawyer researching
an obscure case

- a jazz pianist composing
- a cook experimenting
with an unusual seasoning
- a fisherman trying
to outsmart a wily trout
- a designer sketching
a fashion layout
- a minister writing
a sermon
- a poet capturing a
metaphor
- an engineer tinkering
with a problematic device
- a twelve-year-old kid
"playing" endlessly with graphics software
What all these folks have in
common is that they're learning, exploring, breaking through barriers, generating
ideas, rejecting ideas, solving problems, identifying opportunities, making judgments,
receiving input from others and their senses, experimenting, trying, failing, trying
again. In other words, they're creating ... creating works of art, experiences, inventions,
pictures, words, relationships, music, recipes, fun, and self-fulfillment.
Every one of them is exercising
creativity, because that's what we do. It comes with the territory of being a human
being. We create. We are creative beings. We create because it helps us survive and
it feels good ... it brings us joy.
When we don't create, when
we don't learn and grow, it brings us pain. It deadens us. When this innate urge to
create is thwarted or stifled, we turn to unhealthy substitutes such as drugs, alcohol,
crime, violence, etc. to lessen the pain.
So the answer to the question
of "Are you creative?" is an overwhelming "yes!" All of us have the need to create
and it has nothing to do with whether or not someone else labels us "creative." To
eliminate part of the confusion about creativity, perhaps we should use "Creativity"
(big-C) to mean the kind of creativity that is recognized by a group of judges and
"creativity" (small-c) to mean the innate drive each of us have to express ourselves.
Our focus should be on small-c
creativity because that's all we can control ... and that's where the fun is. As we
learn more and more ways to generate ideas and express our unique combination of talents,
skills and life experiences, we might earn a big-C Creativity label but that is a
side-effect, a cherry on top of the life-sundae ... nice, but not the main event.
Written by Joyce Wycoff,
Co-founder of the InnovationNetwork
©2000, InnovationNetwork
- www.thinksmart.com
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