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Everyday Creative
📰 Article

Everyday Creative

Upend your personal status quo and reclaim your natural creativity in every single action you take Everyone claims to value creativity, and businesses are clamouring for disruptive thinking and innovation. Yet we often feel creatively stifled at work, because business processes seem to leave no room for real originality. In this climate, it takes a heroic effort to reclaim our status as independent thinkers, to bring meaning and joy to our work lives and to make lasting changes that will bring value to everyone around us. In Everyday Creative, culture and creative leadership expert Mykel Dixon reveals what’s holding us back from our full creative potential and explains how we can reclaim our original, vibrant selves. Is your ability to think differently hindered by an unconscious view that creativity doesn’t belong in the boardroom? It’s an all-too-common mistake, but the truth is, creativity is fundamental for business growth and personal fulfilment. If you want to survive in the digital era, you need to pursue your own creative sensibilities and foster creativity in your team. This book shows that original thinking can shake things up, becoming the source of our competitive advantage and a key driver of sustainable success. Recognise your own unconventional talent and creative potential Transform yourself into a more vibrant and resilient human being ready to lead the world in the fourth industrial revolution Cultivate dynamic team environments where people feel safe to explore dangerous ideas Instigate a high-level cultural and strategic pivot toward more creativity in your company Everyday Creative is about creative leadership and the courage to seek, nurture and liberate original thinking. Read this book to learn how to make the essential skill of creativity accessible to all people, regardless of role, title or department.

Personal Development Creativity Books
5 ideas 949 reads
The Neuroscience of Creativity, Perception, and Confirmation Bias | Beau Lotto | Big Think
📰 Article

The Neuroscience of Creativity, Perception, and Confirmation Bias | Beau Lotto | Big Think

The Neuroscience of Creativity, Perception, and Confirmation Bias <br>Watch the newest video from Big Think: https://bigth.ink/NewVideo<br>Join Big Think+ for exclusive videos: https://bigthink.com/plus/<br>----------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br>To ensure your survival, your brain evolved to avoid one thing: uncertainty. As neuroscientist Beau Lotto points out, if your ancestors wondered for too long whether that noise was a predator or not, you wouldn't be here right now. Our brains are geared to make fast assumptions, and questioning them in many cases quite literally equates to death. No wonder we're so hardwired for confirmation bias. No wonder we'd rather stick to the status quo than risk the uncertainty of a better political model, a fairer financial system, or a healthier relationship pattern. But here's the catch: as our brains evolved toward certainty, we simultaneously evolved away from creativity—that's no coincidence; creativity starts with a question, with uncertainty, not with a cut and dried answer. To be creative, we have to unlearn millions of years of evolution. Creativity asks us to do that which is hardest: to question our assumptions, to doubt what we believe to be true. That is the only way to see differently. And if you think creativity is a chaotic and wild force, think again, says Beau Lotto. It just looks that way from the outside. The brain cannot make great leaps, it can only move linearly through mental possibilities. When a creative person forges a connection between two things that are, to your mind, so far apart, that's a case of high-level logic. They have moved through steps that are invisible to you, perhaps because they are more open-minded and well-practiced in questioning their assumptions. Creativity, it seems, is another (highly sophisticated) form of logic. Beau Lotto is the author of Deviate: The Science of Seeing Differently.<br>---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- <br>BEAU LOTTO:<br><br>Beau Lotto is a professor of neuroscience, previously at University College London and now at the University of London, and a Visiting Scholar at New York University.<br><br>His work focuses on the biological, computational and psychological mechanisms of perception. He has conducted and presented research on human and bumblebee perception and behavior for more than 25 years, and his interest in education, business and the arts has led him into entrepreneurship and engaging the public with science.<br><br>In 2001, Beau founded the Lab of Misfits, a neuro-design studio that was resident for two years at London's Science Museum and most recently at Viacom in New York. The lab's experimental studio approach aims to deepen our understanding of human nature, advance personal and social well-being through research that places the public at the centre of the process of discovery, and create unique programmes of engagement that span the boundaries between people, disciplines and institutions. Originally from Seattle, with degrees from UC Berkeley and Edinburgh Medical School, he now lives in Oxford and New York.<br><br>www.labofmisfits.com<br>---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- <br>TRANSCRIPTION:<br><br>Beau Lotto: Every behavior that we do, we do to reduce uncertainty. We do it to increase certainty. When you go down below in a boat and your eyes are moving and registering the boat, and your eyes are saying, “Oh, we’re standing still,” but your inner ears are saying, “No, no, we’re moving.” And your brain cannot deal with that conflict so it gets ill.<br><br>The stress resulting from uncertainty is tremendous in our society. It increases brain cell death. It decreases plasticity. It makes you a more extreme version of yourself. We do almost everything to avoid uncertainty. And yet the irony is that that’s the only place we can go if we’re ever going to see differently. And that’s why creativity, seeing differently, always begins in the same way: it begins with a question. It begins with not knowing. It begins with a 'why?'. It begins with a 'what if?'.<br><br>And I should also say that these assumptions are essential for your survival. Every time you take a step your brain has hundreds of assumptions: that the floor is not going to give way, that your legs aren’t going to give way, that that’s not a hole, it’s a surface. So these assumptions keep us alive. But they can also get in the way, because what was once useful may no longer be useful. So your brain evolved to evolve. It's adapted to adapt. So a deep question is: how is it possible to ever see differently if everything you see is a reflex grounded in your history of assumptions?<br><br>Read the full transcript at https://bigthink.com/videos/beau-lotto-creativity-is-another-form-of-logic

Problem Solving Creativity Videos
5 ideas 953 reads
Brené Brown: Why Your Critics Aren't The Ones Who Count
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Brené Brown: Why Your Critics Aren't The Ones Who Count

About this presentation<br><br>There is nothing more frightening than the moment we expose our ideas to the world. Author and vulnerability researcher Brené Brown shows us how to deal with the critics and our own self-doubt by refusing to "armor up" and shut ourselves off. "Not caring what people think," she says, "is its own kind of hustle."<br><br>Instead we must "reserve a seat" for the critics and our own self-doubt. "Tell them, I see you, I hear you, but I'm going to do this anyway." <br><br>Watch more videos at http://www.99u.com/videos<br><br><br>2:14 "Design is a function of connection. Nothing is more then vulnerable then creativity. What is art if it is not love?"<br>3:11 Perspiration from fear<br>6:48 Theodore Roosevelt quote/passage that changed my life: "It's not the critic who counts..."<br>7:39 Everything i know about vulnerability: it is not about winning or losing, it's about showing up and being seen<br>7:53 "This is who I want to be I want to create. I want to make thing that didn't exist before touched them."<br>8:14 One guarantee: you will get you ass kicked <br>8:39 "If you're not in the arena also getting your ass kicked, I'm no interested in your opinion"<br>9:41 This is where we sweat<br>10:17 Fear, self doubt, comparison, anxiety<br>11:06 When you armor up, you shut yourself off from everything that you do an love <br>11:40 Without vulnerability you cannot create<br>12:41 Know your critics are there, know what they're going to say<br>12:57 Shame, scarcity and comparison<br>15:20 "When we stop caring what people thing we lose our capacity for connection. When we become defined by what people thing we lose our capacity to be vulnerable."<br>16:38 If you're going to spend your life in the ring/showing up, you're going to need: 1) Clarity of values<br>17:18 2) Have person in your life thats going to pick you up<br>18:14 "People who have the most courage and vulnerability are the ones who are very clear about who the critics are and reserve seats for them."<br>19:32 One of these seats needs to be reserved for you<br><br><br><br>About Brené Brown<br><br>Dr. Brené Brown is a research professor at the University of Houston Graduate College of Social Work. She has spent the past twelve years studying vulnerability, courage, worthiness, and shame. Her groundbreaking research has been featured on PBS, NPR, CNN, The Washington Post, and The New York Times.<br><br>Brené is the author of the #1 New York Times Bestseller, Daring Greatly: How the Courage to Be Vulnerable Transforms the way we Live, Love, Parent, and Lead (Gotham, 2012). In Daring Greatly Brené dispels the cultural myth that vulnerability is weakness and argues that it is, in truth, our most accurate measure of courage. Fast Company Magazine recently named Daring Greatly one of the best business books of 2012. Brené's 2010 TEDx Houston talk, The Power of Vulnerability, is one of the top ten most viewed TED talks on TED.com, with over 6 million viewers.<br><br>Brené is also the author of The Gifts of Imperfection (2010), I Thought It Was Just Me (2007), and Connections (2009). She lives in Houston with her husband, Steve, and their two children, Ellen and Charlie.<br><br><br>About 99U<br><br>The 99U delivers the action-oriented education that you didn't get in school, highlighting real-world best practices for making ideas happen.

Creativity Videos
8 ideas 598 reads

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