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Category — creativity

Mega Blocks: How Creativity Saved The World

Joe wrote to show a cool little pamphlet from Mega Blocks. Here’s part of it:

mega-creativity-saved-the-world.jpg

Check out the whole thing at FourHMan: How Creativity Saved the World

March 2, 2008   No Comments

Brain Rules: 12 Principles for Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home, and School by John Medina

John Medina

Thoughts/Words/Reviews:

Most of us have no idea what’s really going on inside our heads. Yet brain scientists have uncovered details every business leader, parent, and teacher should know–such as the brain’s need for physical activity to work at its best.

How do we learn? What exactly do sleep and stress do to our brains? Why is multi-tasking a myth? Why is it so easy to forget–and so important to repeat new information? Is it true that men and women have different brains?

In Brain Rules, molecular biologist Dr. John Medina shares his lifelong interest in how the brain sciences might influence the way we teach our children and the way we work. In each chapter, he describes a brain rule–what scientists know for sure about how our brains work–and then offers transformative ideas for our daily lives.

Medina’s fascinating stories and sense of humor breathe life into brain science. You’ll learn why Michael Jordan was no good at baseball. You’ll peer over a surgeon’s shoulder as he finds, to his surprise, that we have a Jennifer Aniston neuron. You’ll meet a boy who has an amazing memory for music but can’t tie his own shoes.

You will discover how:

- Every brain is wired differently
- Exercise improves cognition
- We are designed to never stop learning and exploring
- Memories are volatile
- Sleep is powerfully linked with the ability to learn
- Vision trumps all of the other senses
- Stress changes the way we learn

In the end, you’ll understand how your brain really works–and how to get the most out of it.

About the DVD The Brain Rules DVD, included with this book, is a lively tour of the 12 brain rules. You will experience firsthand Medina’s rare gift for making science fun, accessible, and relevant. The DVD will take your understanding of the book to the next level.

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February 29, 2008   No Comments

Creating Creativity’s Increasing Creativity: 5 Tips On How To Trick Your Brain Into Taking A Fresh Look At The World

5-creativity-makers.jpgI stumbled upon a nice list of tips to trick your brain to take a fresh look at things, and maybe, spark some creative stuff at: Creative Creativity

They are:

  1. The George Costanza Method
  2. Change Your Commute
  3. Calling Things By The Wrong Name
  4. Write WIth the Wrong Hand
  5. Listen to a Radio Talk Show That Pisses You Off

So go check out 5 Tips On How To Trick Your Brain Into Taking A Fresh Look At The World to get all the details!

February 25, 2008   1 Comment

Lighten Up! Read Julia Cameron’s “How to Avoid Making Art”

Julia Cameron

Our Rating: Rating: 5

Thoughts/Words/Reviews:
This hilarious look at creative blockage and blunder is a laugh-out-loud tribute to artist procrastination.

In How to Avoid Making Art, the bestselling author of The Artist’s Way delivers a (tongue-in-cheek!) guide to doing anything and everything you possibly can to avoid making art. Anyone who is engaged in a creative pursuit will no doubt identify with these wonderful cartoons by award-winning artist Elizabeth Cameron of creative wannabes doing everything except actually getting down to work.

“For most people creativity is a serious business,” says Julia Cameron. “They forget the telling phrase ‘the play of ideas’ and think that they need to knuckle down and work more. Often, the reverse is true. They need to play.” Ultimately, the characters in this book show us how we can turn our procrastination into play and our play into great work. With this delightful volume, Julia Cameron once again hits the nail on the head on the subject of creativity.

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February 25, 2008   No Comments

Brad’s Reader: What Can John Lennon Teach Us About Creativity

Brad’s Reader has a good post on creativity: What Can John Lennon Teach Us About Creativity. He talks about John Lennon’s struggle to write a song and how he come up with Nowhere Man.

brad-reader-creativity-header.jpg

My takeaway is this:

  • Do exercises to brainstorm and “just write” or whatever. They’re good. Gems can come out of this sort of thing.
  • But sometimes you’ve got to stop and let your subconscious do your work for you. Rest or do a mundane task that needs to be done like the dishes or mowing the lawn. That’s when the great ideas often come.
  • But then, it’s time to get to real work and make the idea a reality! Work it! Work it! Work it!

So, check out: What Can John Lennon Teach Us About Creativity

February 24, 2008   No Comments

Free Book “The Lonely Writer” and Other Creativity Resources Posted at Copyblogger

copyblogger-three-free-resources.jpgCopyblogger has posted three nice free resources today: Three Great Resources That
Won’t Cost You a Dime

Of particular note is the book “The Lonely Writer”, which helps writers get un-stuck, maintain focus and get the words out and down on paper. Download “The Lonely Writer” Directly Here.

Enjoy.


Creative Commons License photo credit: badjonni

February 23, 2008   No Comments

Blog Post: 8+ Ways To Train Yourself To Be Creative

8-ways-to-learn-to-be-creative.jpgSome dude John Hoff posted a decent article on training yourself to be creative. You ARE creative! Expand your horizons! Read the post!

February 23, 2008   1 Comment

Thinkertoys: A Handbook of Creative-Thinking Techniques (2nd Edition) by Michael Michalko

Michael Michalko

Thoughts/Words/Reviews:

THINKERTOYS will teach you how to generate new ideas for businesses, markets, sales techniques, and products and product extensions. Packed with fun and practical tools and exercises, it outlines 30 practical linear and intuitive techniques that can be used by individuals or groups to tackle and solve business problems in fresh, creative ways.

An updated edition of the best-selling business creativity book, with more than 30 brainstorming techniques and hundreds of creative-thinking tips and tricks. Revision includes new techniques, examples, and sections on group brainstorming and endgames.

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February 10, 2008   1 Comment

What a Great Idea! 2.0: Unlocking Your Creativity in Business and in Life by Chic Thompson

Chic Thompson

Thoughts/Words/Reviews:

It has sold more than 200,000 copies since 1992—and now the most imaginative guide to thinking creatively is back, in a new and improved version. Author Chic Thompson knows that everyone wants to be more creative—and he knows how to make it possible. That’s why the Harvard Business School released a case study on him. Thompson has had unparalleled success teaching readers how to harness their ingenuity to generate new product ideas, resolve difficulties in the workplace, and overcome bureaucratic language and “killer phrases” that stifle innovation. The good news is that this great-looking, thoroughly updated edition features even more brain-stimulating suggestions, exercises, action sheets, tips for using new technologies, ideas for encouraging creativity at home, and much more.

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February 9, 2008   3 Comments

Finding Your Own North Star: Claiming the Life You Were Meant to Live by Martha Beck

Martha Beck

Thoughts/Words/Reviews:

Put the telescope away; the North Star mentioned here is a human body, not a heavenly one. And like Polaris, which has guided sailors for centuries, the human body’s gut feelings and emotions can help guide a wayward soul back to his or her “essential self.” In this absorbing combination of detailed self-awareness exercises and true stories from her own counseling experience (equal parts sobering and hysterically entertaining), Harvard-trained sociologist Martha Beck invites readers to explore their heart’s desires and the vast social webs that keep such desires in check. The goal is not to forsake the “social self” and indulge every emotional impulse of the “essential self.” Rather, Beck gives readers the tools and the encouragement to achieve maximum happiness by harmonizing these typically divergent voices.

Beck (author of Expecting Adam) admits that repairing a damaged emotional compass and setting out on such a vital journey–which often involves painful realizations and changes–”has all the combined attractions of suicide and childbirth.” But the payoff, she concludes, is a love affair with real life. To that end, she walks readers through a lengthy exercise to evaluate their current lifestyle’s pleasures and pains, teaches the process of listening to the body for directional cues, describes how to extract “soul shrapnel” (healing all those nasty, self-defeating emotional wounds), and provides an intriguing “Map of Change” to achieve an authentic life. Beck’s impressive knowledge, her engaging (if somewhat irreverent) voice, and her ability to parse this scary process into achievable steps make her a new champion in the self-help arena. –Liane Thomas

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February 6, 2008   No Comments