How Jotting Down Ideas in 30 Seconds Boosts Creativity
An
adult has an average of 50,000 thoughts every day. Now try to recall 100
of those thoughts from earlier today. Pretty hard, right?
It’s
normal to forget most of them as our brains have to filter out unnecessary
information so that we don’t go insane. The problem is that we forget a lot of great ideas along the way.
Great ideas often come when a person is
unprepared
Most
of the time great ideas come from diffused mode: Thoughts come to you in
this state when you’re not intently focused. Daydreaming or zoning out in the
shower are perfect examples of this state of mind. Creative ideas come to us
during this state of mind because this is when our minds are the most relaxed.
This is when our brains connect different neural pathways to come up with brand
new ideas (the same as how creativity allows us to connect the dots, our brains
do this naturally in this state). As our brains are so relaxed, there’s no
intention to mark down ideas that come along.
Never trust your brain: it’s bad at
memory
Very
often the ideas that come to us during diffuse mode can be a bit abstract. Out
of the box thinking, if you will. This is your best content. The high level,
creative, new ideas that are going to take the world by storm.
Remember
the genius, ground-breaking idea you came up with in the shower? The one that
was going to revolutionize the world as we know it? Of course you can’t
remember. Your monumental idea slipped through the cracks of your memory, never
to be heard from again because you didn’t take the time to write it down.
In
today’s race against time, we just can’t spare an extra moment to jot down the
ideas that constantly pass through our heads. Some people may think that it’s
even a waste of time. We think that if the thought is that important, we will
remember it later and put it into action. But we don’t. And we’re just left
with that empty vagueness- “I know I was on to something, what was it again?”
Jot down, jot down, jot down
Don’t
be lazy, Jot down the great idea no matter how confident you’re to remember
that.
Keep
recording tools within reach, but not directly in sight. If you set out a
notebook and pen directly in front of you, you are no longer in diffuse mode
and thoughts are not free flowing. But you want the notebook to be close
enough, so that when the thoughts come to you, you can quickly jot them down.
Smartphone
apps such as Evernote are a great option for this. Some others are recording
apps, a waterproof notebook for the shower, your laptop, or simply a notebook
and pen (this is my personal favorite, more authentic.)
Resist the urge to organize
It’s
so easy to fall into the trap of immediately organizing your thoughts as they
come to you. Don’t do it. Organizing is a separate task for later, when you
switch into focus mode (the opposite of diffuse mode).
Stick
to the process of free thinking and writing down ideas and leaving them alone
until later. If you try to organize them as they come, you’ll lose many ideas
because you are too focused on a single idea. You’ll also lose motivation
because you’re loading yourself up with work and complicating the process.
Review, review, review
Now
that you have the ideas written down, you need to reinforce the ideas to turn
them into something bigger. You should review your ideas around 3 times a week.
While
reviewing you can filter out some of the less useful ideas, organize them, and
start developing the potentially successful ones.
Remember,
most people have plenty of great ideas, just very few of them bother to jot
them down. And those who do are the ones who succeed.
Brian Lee
http://www.lifehack.org/609246/how-jotting-down-ideas-in-30-seconds-boosts-creativity?ref=mail&mtype=newsletter_tier_2&mid=20170719&uid=687414&hash=707e797f7e757e6d794c856d747b7b3a6f7b79&utm_source=newsletter_tier_2&utm_medium=email&action=click
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