Creating
creativity
Where does creativity come from?
If it were possible to bottle it or
press it into pills or entube it as a topical ointment, a person could quickly
become richer than that Gates couple.
It’s often associated with mythical mists
or muses, or angelic whispers in one’s ear, or superlative IQ, or an Ivy League
education, or some divine gift twisted into a lucky person’s DNA. I don’t think it’s any of those things.
Creativity, I believe, draws on a sort
of savings account. And the more a
person has managed to squirrel away in that account, the more creative she or
he can be.
But the account is not in a vault. It resides in the convolutions of the mind.
A person who has studied—really studied—a
molten sunset, or the way twilight burnishes a loved one’s skin, or the perfect
play of muscles in a galloping horse, or a roiling summer thunderhead, or the
changing veils of droplets in a waterfall, or a glassy backlit ocean wave, or
an overheard happy or contentious conversation, and who has stored such
knowledge away in that brain bank, has a wealth of material to apply to
creative constructions of all kinds, from art to sculpture to crafts to
writing. Only through careful scrutiny
can an artist or photographer begin to capture the subtle play of light and
shadow and myriad combinations of hues that will have the power to deeply touch
others of our species. Only through
listening to others and studying their behaviors can a writer hope to reproduce
the panoply of human emotions faithfully, and thus command the widest possible
audience.
A high, sad percentage of humanity idles
along only peripherally aware of surroundings, assimilating only a fraction of
the beauty, mystery, and majesty of life and nature that abounds all around us on
our planet.
Those relative few who do experience life
to its fullest through habitual in-depth observation of everything around them
are the richest by far. And the most
creative.
“Everything has beauty, but not everyone
sees it.”—Confucius
“You can observe a lot by just
watching.”—Yogi Berra
Phil
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