Archive for the ‘Ideas’ Category

Proctor & Gamble’s New ‘Invention Factory’ the Clay St Project

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

Reminiscent of Thomas Edison’s Invention Factory at Menlo Park, New Jersey, Proctor and Gamble have their own creative thinking think tank over at Over-the-Rhine, Cincinnati.

It sounds like a Disneyland for the creative mind. Check out this cool news item to learn about what those folks are doing over there:

Clay St Project lets P&G Think Outside of the Pyramid

I love the firestarter question that sparks a lot of creativity over there:

“If you were going to come to Earth and see things for the first time, what would they look like?”

A great question to take with you into 2009 — so you can see with fresh eyes… and thus see what others miss.

Wishing you happy new year and creative days,

Wily

How To Choose The Best Idea After Brainstorming

Sunday, December 28th, 2008

I like Mitesh’s post on How To Choose The Best Idea After Brainstorming

His three little categories for sorting your ideas into make perfect sense.

Of course, once you’ve done your brainstorming, and made your own choice as to the best ideas, you need some feedback.

Trouble is… when you ask for criticism you get it. People automatically go into “what’s wrong?” mode and that can savage a perfectly good idea and perhaps stop you in your tracks.

Fortunately, Mitesh has a way round that, by getting the feedback group to apply the same categorization process to the ideas and see which ones triumph overall.

A brief guide to world domination

Monday, July 7th, 2008

One of the tips in my Brain Squeezer series is Brain Squeezer 034: World Ruler, where you imagine what you would do if you ruled the world.

I just stumbledupon Chris Guillebeau’s fantastic manifesto: A Brief Guide To World Domination which takes this concept further.

I want to recommend that you get this free download and also explore the concepts he shares at his excellent site, The Art of Non-Conformity

Following thought home…

Monday, April 14th, 2008

I’m intrigued by the relationship of the concious mind, the so-called unconscious mind, and the hyperthetical superconscious or universal (and supposedly all-powerful) mind.

Recent brain research showed how our conscious thoughts emerge from the unconscious mind. Brain activity shows up before we are conscious of thinking the thought. This makes sense, but not to that part of us that likes to think it is consciously making decisions.

It’s a shock to the ego to realize that, actually, no, I’m not in charge!

conscious mind and unconscious mind

The conscious mind that we know is little more than a pimple on the skin of the deep vast mind. It’s been called the tip of the iceberg. But I suspect that even that idea makes too much of it, as though the conscious mind is the pinnacle of mental achievement.

It’s worth questioning that assumption.

Unconscious mind. Unconscious means we are ‘not consciously aware of’… it’s happening outside of our conscious knowingness.

How are you beating your heart? Growing hair on your body? Repairing and replacing body cells?

You don’t know. What else don’t you know that is going on and being directed by the deep vast mind, the unconscious?

I like to explore by retracing thought trails back to their source. We’ve already established that thought originates at the unconscious level. So tracing thought backwards offers some hope of getting some kind of insight into the unconscious mind.

At least, that is what I am exploring.

I think it is problematic to have these ideas of conscious, unconsious, subconscious as it helps to create the sense of separation and isolation. You need to move into a state of mind in which you accept it all as the big YOU — even if you are not conscious of all it’s goings-on.

It’s like the body… when you start obsessing about one part of it, you create a sense of separation and disconnectedness from the body. But that disappears when you get absorbed in some physical activity like playing soccer or frisbee or something, and you are just in the body making use of it.

Tracing thought home does give you an opportunity to connect and merge with the deep vast mind. It’s like a meditation in that you have to go beyond conscious verbal thought and plunge into the vastness that is the core of your being.

Then, without thought, you can really only operate on intuition (perception and aperception), experience through being, and pure awareness.

I think the verbal conscious thought stream is a very thin and limited bandwidth data-stream from the unconscious. We need to create or become aware of other channels of data emerging from the unconscious mind. So far one of the best ways we’ve identified to do this is through something like Win Wenger’s image streaming process which taps into the same sort of data stream as we experience in regular night time dreaming.

CLANG DELTA - Bonnie Schupp’s 10-Step Program to Creative Thinking

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

Photojournalist Bonnie Schupp wrote to me to share her 10-Step Program to Creative Thinking, which formed part of a wonderfully lucid and thought-provoking essay she wrote on The Birth of Ideas.

She kindly allowed me to reproduce it here. So here’s Bonnie’s CLANG DELTA formula:

CLANG DELTA
Bonnie’s 10-Step Program to Creative Thinking
 

Create solely for the joy of it.

Let curiosity drive you.

Abandon your need to fit in.

Nourish the child in you and let this child come out to play.

Give yourself permission to be eccentric, even outrageous.
 

Dismiss the judge in you that sets rules and boundaries.

Experience something new each day.

Look at the world as if you were an ant, egret or alien.

Take time to vegetate without being afraid you are wasting time.

Ask what if.

Here are some links to Bonnie Schupp’s work as a creative photojournalist, with her comments:

“Many of my portfolio images are typical “stock” photos without a creative edge. They sell. But some (my favorites) lean more toward the creative side of concepts:
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=5804006
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=2924887
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=3484871
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=4830859
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=5267743
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=5166395
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=4033577
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=5148291
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=4482494
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=4578997
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=4281933
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=2329243
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=4343206
 
http://www.istockphoto.com/file_closeup.php?id=3724183
“This one shows ‘SCHUMAN’ name cut off to read ‘HUMAN’ just by moving a little to one side while composing the photo.”

View My Portfolio

Click the image above to go to Bonnie’s main business site

Back to the future with Remote Viewing

Monday, April 7th, 2008

 remote viewing

Hey you!

You might be interested in my answers to Dustin’s questions on Remote Viewing prompted by my earlier article on remote viewing the future to steal creative ideas!

This is a two-part conversation on remote viewing as it relates to creativity, so be sure to continue to the end of the page to read it all.

Here’s the link:

Getting clarity on remote viewing the future

Ciao,

Wily