Thursday 16 February 2017

Creative Insight - Heather Dyer

©Nevit Dilmen

If only we could summon creative insights at will. Then we could solve our plot problems - and our life problems, too. But insights tend to surprise us when we least expect them: when we’re stepping off a bus or getting out of the shower or dropping off to sleep.

There’s a reason for this. Creative insight requires that we momentarily let go of thinking, of clinging to what we already know - and even of caring about the outcome - so that the brain’s unconscious processes can make new connections. The mind needs to be open and exploring freely, without judgement and without attachment to a set goal.

©Nevit Dilmen

Creativity, therefore, requires a mindful state of mind. Ellen Langer has written more about the parallels between creativity and mindfulness in her book On Becoming An Artist: Reinventing Yourself Through Mindful Creativity. In fact, Langer is of the opinion that mindfulness and creativity are the same thing.


But there’s a quick way to trick the mind into a mindful (or creative) attitude: freewriting. Freewriting is writing steadily without stopping and without knowing where you’re going. I recently trialed some freewriting exercises with a group of fellow writers at a Royal Literary Fund conference, with interesting results.

I describe some of the prompts I used on the RLF consultant fellows’ blog today. (If you aren’t already familiar with the RLF, their website and blog are really useful resources created by and for writers.)

Try the exercises yourself – or with students, if you’re a teacher. Failing this, you could always take an 8-week mindfulness course. I highly recommend it, both for writing and for life. I frequently receive insights or remember things I’ve got to do when I’m supposed to be meditating …


Heather Dyer, Royal Literary Fund Consultant Fellow

5 comments:

Rowena House said...

It's so true! Letting go absolutely vital. For me, free writing is for the thornier problems, while deliberately looking at (and marvelling about) nature a daily exercise, but then I'm fantastically lucky that Devon coast invites such cleansing reflections.

Susan Price said...

Everything you say is very true, Heather. I've always simply handed it over to 'the daemon.' I outline the problem(s) in my mind and say, 'Over to you. Get back to me when you have a solution.' It usually does, in a few days, while I'm doing something else - and yes, Rowena, often while I'm walking somewhere among trees and grass.

I wrote about the daemon here

Heather Dyer said...

Yes, nature is such a great way of letting go. And I love that piece on the Daemon, Sue. So envious that you can hand over control to it that way, I find it hard to do...

Unknown said...

TheJungleBook(1994film)
JungleBook:Mowgli'sStory
JustMarried
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JustVisiting
Keith
Kid,The(1999)
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Unknown said...

TheJungleBook(1994film)
JungleBook:Mowgli'sStory
JustMarried
JustMyLuck
JustVisiting
Keith
Kid,The(1999)
Kid,The(2010)
KidsinAmerica
Killer,The