Curated from:
informationprime.wordpress.com
Ideas, facts & insights covering these topics:
8 ideas · 142 reads
Consider what happens to other parts of our bodies when we don’t use them. If, for instance, you don’t use your arm for years, eventually the muscles and ligaments will atrophy. Then, when you try to do something with that arm, you won’t be able to. This is the situation that most of us are in with our imaginations: It’s not that we don’t possess a faculty of imagination; it’s that, for most of our lives, we haven’t had a chance to use it.
Our lives have become so fast-paced that we no longer have time to dream. Daydreaming at work or school as reported by science direct could be a sign that you’re smart and creative but to do this, the imagination needs to be in a relaxed state. When you are rushing around and under stress, it’s just about impossible for your imagination to operate as it was designed to do.
We usually don’t get much chance to exercise and develop our imaginations at work. In the highly complex technological cultures of the twenty-first century, survival depends not on one’s ability to make mental pictures, but on one’s intellect. A Gallup survey of 16,500 employees found that merely 35% of workers are given a chance to stay creative at work.
We live in a culture that bombards us constantly with deliberately constructed artificial images: advertisements on billboards and in magazines; the fast-moving images of television and movies and of course the internet and social media.
Many recent studies have demonstrated the negative effects of watching television, showing that this activity impedes children’s abilities to read, write, think, socialize, and engage in physical activity.
You may have found it easier to picture some colors than others; that’s fine — you don’t have to do this perfectly. And if you had difficulty, don’t despair; with regular and frequent practice you can easily recover your ability to imagine.
You can adopt and adapt this practice with your other senses too. Touch, Sounds, Smell and Taste.