In a fast paced
innovative world
where attention spans are shrinking by the minute, we are becoming more
and more ‘under the pump’ to think and be creative. We tend to hit a
block and stay frustrated and impatient in hopes of a creative flow to
come our way again.
We here at Addicted2Success, see this as a HUGE problemo and have therefore decided to research and share with you, the
7 Reasons Why You Have Lost Your Creativity, so that you may be able to pin point your vice and get the creative juices pumping out again.
Why You Have Lost Your Creativity
1. You Grew Up!
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All young kids have
creative ideas.
They make up imaginary playmates, play with dolls and action figures,
bake cookies in imaginary ovens, solve imaginary mysteries when they
play detective with the other kids in the neighborhood, they sing songs
they make up, they dance in free form, and when they draw pictures it
doesn’t matter that horses aren’t purple in real life.
Somewhere along the way, we become more rational, even jaded
sometimes, about the world. Those few among us who stay creative as
adults often exhibit a child-like spirit. If you walk into the office of
creative types like graphic artists, website
designers, engineers, and programmers, it is very likely that you find
toys around. Think about Google, a company known for hiring creative
individuals. They turn their their workspace into a playground of sorts
with large shiny slides to carry you in kid-like fashion from one floor
to the next and they have bean bags for chairs in some of their
boardrooms.
2. Your Need To ‘Make Money’ May Have Squelched Your Creative Side
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As
we near adulthood, our parents, teachers, school counsellors, and even
our peers start talking to us about the practical side of life. Our
parents might say, “You need to have a way to support yourself.” Our
guidance counsellors may steer us toward a certain college degree
program or specialized training program because it pays well and we have
an aptitude for it, not because we enjoy it. Our need to make money and
take care of ourselves often squelches our creative side.
Those young adults who rebel and become musicians and artists may hear things like, “When are you going to get a real job?”
even if they are working 60 hours a week! If you follow these same
people into their thirties and forties, most of the time you’ll find
that they finally give in too and go and get a “real job” to support
themselves and their family.
3. Pharmaceuticals Are Zapping Our Creativity
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According
to the United States Centers For Disease and Prevention (CDC), more
than 5.2 million children are diagnosed each year with attention
deficient disorder (ADD). These kids tend to be harder to manage in the
classroom so schools and doctors have been pushing Ritalin, a
pharmaceutical that calms them down and also zaps their creativity! In
fact, according to the CDC, as many as 70 percent of all children in
some areas are given Ritalin.
Creativity altering and behavior modifying pharmaceuticals
are also given to those individuals who are considered bi-polar, manic,
or depressed. Then there are those individuals who have Asperger’s
Syndrome or so called “personality disorders” who are given
pharmaceuticals that crush creativity too. Some of the most famous
creative individuals that have ever lived are thought to have had
Asperger’s Syndrome, bouts of depression, mania, ADD, and bi-polarism.
Think what we would have lost if Mozart or Van Gogh would have been
given pharmaceuticals to subdue their creativity!
4. You May Not Be Getting Enough Sleep or the Right Kind Of Sleep
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When we sleep, there are two basic phases:
REM sleep and deep sleep.
REM sleep is a light form of sleep named after the fact that we often
have “rapid eye movements” during REM sleep. It takes about a hour and a
half to move out of REM sleep into deep sleep. Deep sleep is when our
brains sort out and catalog all the information we have taken in during
the day. If we don’t get enough of this type of sleep, we lose our
ability to be creative and imaginative.
5. You May Be Vegging Out In Front Of the TV Too Much
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There is a famous TV viewing experiment conducted by
Herbert Krugman
dating back to 1969. Herbert found that in less than one minute of TV
viewing, our dominant brain waves switch from beta waves to alpha waves.
It puts us in a vegetative state where our conscious mind goes on
autopilot. While this can be good in small quantities to relieve stress,
most Americans are watching on average more hours of TV than any other
country.
Too much TV stifles creativity.
6. You May Be Just Too Darn Tired!
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In
our modern day society, we are on the go all the time. We are racing
the clock trying to get our work done, get to meetings, fit in time with
the kids and our spouse so we don’t feel guilty, and generally we
sacrifice sleep to make more hours in the waking day. Over time, this
raises our cortisol levels and puts us in a chronic state of stress and
anxiety which depletes our energy.
Under these circumstances, most people find it very difficult to even think about
being creative.
7. Standardized Tests, Stereotyping, and One Correct Answer
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Our
educational systems, including K-12 and advanced metriculation, have by
and large resorted to standardized tests. These tests have one right
answer. In school and college, we are given multiple choice tests
designed to have one right answer. We are given true and false tests
where we have to pick one or the other with no room for exceptions or
creative thinking. The images and common examples used are stereotyped.
Even as older adults, we have to take driver’s license tests and other
tests that have only one correct answer for each question.
We have created a society that is taught from a young age to zero in
on one way of thinking about each issue and topic. This squelches
creative ideas.
Creativity Picture Quote
Just remember this:
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