Thursday, February 19, 2009

habits, changes of pace, and creativity

A really interesting article from Janet Rae-Dupree in the NYT-- with applications to disciplines, spiritual or otherwise (hat tip: Linda Christiansen)...

Habits are a funny thing. We reach for them mindlessly, setting our brains on auto-pilot and relaxing into the unconscious comfort of familiar routine....So it seems antithetical to talk about habits in the same context as creativity and innovation. But brain researchers have discovered that when we consciously develop new habits, we create parallel synaptic paths, and even entirely new brain cells, that can jump our trains of thought onto new, innovative tracks.

Rather than dismissing ourselves as unchangeable creatures of habit, we can instead direct our own change by consciously developing new habits. In fact, the more new things we try — the more we step outside our comfort zone — the more inherently creative we become, both in the workplace and in our personal lives.

But don’t bother trying to kill off old habits; once those ruts of procedure are worn into the hippocampus, they’re there to stay. Instead, the new habits we deliberately ingrain into ourselves create parallel pathways that can bypass those old roads....

Researchers in the late 1960s discovered that humans are born with the capacity to approach challenges in four primary ways: analytically, procedurally, relationally (or collaboratively) and innovatively. At puberty, however, the brain shuts down half of that capacity, preserving only those modes of thought that have seemed most valuable during the first decade or so of life....

She recommends practicing a Japanese technique called kaizen, which calls for tiny, continuous improvements....

3 Comments:

At February 28, 2009 at 11:18 PM , Blogger Janet Rae-Dupree said...

Writer's name actually is Janet Rae-Dupree, not Jason. She's me.

 
At March 1, 2009 at 3:18 PM , Blogger Eric Schansberg said...

Ouch! I am so sorry about that!!

And I suppose there might be some irony there-- in terms of practicing various disciplines!

 
At March 1, 2009 at 3:18 PM , Blogger Eric Schansberg said...

By the way, I've fixed it now...

 

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