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0816 HN- 4 Easy Ways to Exercise Your Creativity

HUMAN NETWORK: 4 Easy Ways to Exercise Your Creativity

Aug. 1, 2016
Recently I was contacted by a reader asking me if I would suggest some exercises that he could use to think more creatively. That request has inspired me to write […]

Recently I was contacted by a reader asking me if I would suggest some exercises that he could use to think more creatively. That request has inspired me to write about some fun ways that you, too, can exercise your creative mind.

The purpose of these exercises is to condition your mind to quickly make new connections or combinations between 2 or more existing items or ideas. When this becomes second nature, you will begin to automatically notice connections that you never saw before. Some of these may even turn into money-making opportunities.

1. Find New Uses.
Select a common item such as a bottle, comb, fork, or chair, and then come up with 10 or more alternate ways that you use that item. For example, I saw a product on Amazon.com called an Onion Holder (for holding an onion while you slice it); it looks like someone found a new use for a metal hair pick.

2. Make New Connections.
Pick 2 random objects and think of a way you could combine them to come up with a new product. Start right now with the items on your desk: pen, pencil, tape dispenser, stapler, lamp, phone, paperweight, in/out box, paper, and so forth. Have fun here and be as unusual or unconventional as necessary to force these items into something new. Take for example the Roller Buggy, which combined a baby stroller with a scooter, and allows parents to have fun riding with baby.

One of my favorite ways to make new connections is to make up jokes from stuff I hear on the news. A joke is really just a story with a surprise ending. I especially like non sequitur jokes that begin with a logical sequence of thought then take an unexpected direction (sometimes called "being led down a garden path”); such as this one by Ellen DeGeneres: "My grandmother started walking 5 miles a day when she was 60. She’s 97 now, and we don’t know where the hell she is."

Jokes are frequently a play on words that have 2 or more meanings, like this one by Natalie Wood: "The only time a woman really succeeds in changing a man is when he’s a baby."

And, then, there are double entendres such as this classic: "Police station toilet stolen; cops have nothing to go on."

3. Solve Riddles.
Solving riddles exercises your creative thinking in a similar fashion to making up jokes. Riddles are not only fun, but they stimulate your creativity by forcing you to consider the clues from a perspective that is different than normal (riddles, like jokes, often use double entendre or double meaning).

Here are 2 that I found on riddles.com: "What relation would your father’s sister’s sister-in-law be to you?" and "What ends in a ‘W’ but has no end?" (*Answers at end of article).

4. Complete the Picture.
Mr. Squiggle was a television show that originated in Australia. The title character was a marionette with a pencil for a nose. Viewers would scribble a few marks on a piece of paper and mail it into the show. Mr. Squiggle would then use his pencil nose to complete the drawing into an object that children would recognize.

You can do this same exercise at home or the office. Take pen and paper, and make your own arbitrary squiggles, lines and shapes. Look at them until you can visual a recognizable object, then fill in the lines to make the drawing.

Alternatively, you can select 3 or 4 random words from a dictionary, then come up with a sentence using all of them.

In previous articles, I have suggested what I consider to be the most important method for stimulating your creative thoughts: that is to regularly expose yourself to new stimuli, in short, new experiences. Whether you take a trip to some place you’ve never been, or take a class in something you know little or nothing about, or read something that is different from what you normally read, you will expose yourself to new information. That new information creates new neural connections in your brain, which in turn give you more data with which to make new meaningful connections.

The purpose is to get used to seeing connections where you never noticed them before. Then, when you need to solve a problem, you’ll be prepared.

*Riddle answers: your mother; a rainbow.

About the Author

Robert Wilson

Robert Evans Wilson, Jr. is an innovation/change speaker, author, and consultant. He works with companies that want to be more competitive through innovation and with people who want to think more creatively. Rob is the author of ...and Never Coming Back, a psychological mystery-novel about a motion picture director; the inspirational book: Wisdom in the Weirdest Places; and The Annoying Ghost Kid, a humorous children’s book about dealing with a bully. For more information on Rob, please visit http://www.RobWilsonSpeaker.com.