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Creativity: The Constant Invitation

Creativity is not just the domain of those in the arts — it’s there for everyone all the time. As much as we have been trained, educated and socialized out of our natural creativity, it still knocks on our door every moment of every day, beckoning our engagement. To deny creativity’s invitation is to deny the full expression of our humanness. We can heed its call or go back to life as usual, apologizing for any bit of creativity that might seep out in between the serious business of life. But what if it is the lack of valuing — and nurturing — creativity that made the business of life so serious in the first place?

Creativity makes the impossible possible by creating a window, the threshold, the pathway into what is possible and what is next. It transforms perceived limitations into surprising opportunities. It frees us from our current realities and insists on new choices and multiples options. Creativity doesn’t pick favorites. It doesn’t leave anyone out on the sidelines. It gives unconditional regard, and the constant invitation to play… to all. It doesn’t care about job title, educational level, socioeconomic status, religious belief or cultural background. It is there, in infinite availability, for all to indulge.

Creativity is the thread that connects the previously disconnected: the bond that unifies that which is divided. Creativity is what brings concepts to life. It makes the internal external, the imagined real, and the dreamed actualized. It bridges and transcends worlds. It solves problems, expands possibilities, heightens awareness, and animates life. Creativity is giving, nurturing, generative and expansive. It moves us towards more freedom. It’s a diplomat, healer, communicator, and sage.

There is so much life within us, yearning to bubble up in the surface. Creativity is the great animator. It infuses our current structures and systems and allows new forms to emerge. Creativity is always there, waiting, ready to be harnessed, utilized, cultivated and expressed to bring us to life. Along with love, creativity is at the core essence of being human.

We live in a creative universe on a creative planet and it is literally impossible not to create… all the time. There is not a person alive who is not already creative, and if given the space and opportunity, they will come to it and know that of themselves.

© 2007 Michelle James

Creativity expert, catalyst and coach Michelle James, CEO of The Center for Creative Emergence (http://www.creativeemergence.com), works with individuals and business organizations to help them unlock and focus their creativity to develop their “signature”approaches; draw out new ideas, solutions, strategies, services and products; and create inspired, meaningful work. Using the natural principles of emergence with creativity, she developed the whole-brain, whole-systems Creative Emergence Process®. Michelle, is an artist, a performer with Precipice Improv(http://www.precipiceimprov.com), and a CoreSomatics® Movement and Bodywork Master Practitioner. Her techniques has been featured in numerous publications and on television. She also established Quantum Leap Business Improv and founded the Capitol Creativity Network (http://www.capitolcreativitynetwork.com) in Washington, DC. To receive her free monthly creativity newsletter, email michelle@creativeemergence.com and write “Newsletter” in the subject line

Rewarding Your Creativity

Are you a creative person? Do you get paid to create? Do friends simply look at you in awe sometimes and wonder how on Earth you are able to do it? Are you rewarding your creativity? If not you should and let me tell you why. Creative geniuses need to reward themselves and when they accomplish something or come up with a great idea they need to treat themselves to something that they like. A reward if you will. Why do you ask? Because so often creativity becomes a chore and it is no longer fun.

Many times creative people are tapped to work in companies such as in their public-relations department, design department or marketing department. Then their creative spirit becomes a job. If they do not reward their creativity it ceases to be fun and fulfilling. I recommend that you reward you creativity. As a creative person myself, I have noted that when I reward myself for my creativity that I often enjoy going back to create more.

By rewarding my creativity after I accomplished a creative act, I smile inside and think a job well done. This makes getting to the goal of creating extremely fun. Anybody who is a creative person knows that during the act of creating it is a fun process and if you reward yourself after you are done then you get a double dose of happiness. This will help you love what you do and therefore you will do it better.

If you fail to reward yourself for your creativity then it just becomes a chore or another job and then it becomes no fun. Please consider ways that you can reward yourself for the creativity that you perform in advance and promise yourself that you will reward your efforts for finishing the completed project of your creativity. Think on this in 2006.

“Lance Winslow” - Online Think Tank forum board. If you have innovative thoughts and unique perspectives, come think with Lance; www.WorldThinkTank.net/. Lance is a guest writer for Our Spokane Magazine in Spokane, Washington

Top Ten Reasons To Start Creativity Coaching

DEVELOP YOUR ARTISTIC CONFIDENCE I’d really like to write but I don’t have enough time. Creativity coaching can give you back control over your calendar.

EXPAND YOUR HOBBY TO A PART-TIME BUSINESS: I can make crafts for others, but I’m too scared to sell them to strangers. Creativity coaching can teach you how to expand and meet your artistic expectations.

EXPLORE YOUR COMMUNICATION SKILLS: Marketing my work to new markets is difficult. Creativity coaching can teach you how to research and develop new markets.

ACHIEVE YOUR ARTISTIC GOALS: I can set goals, but I can’t complete them. Creativity coaching can teach you how to formulate and complete your goals.

EXPLORE ALL ASPECTS OF YOUR CREATIVITY: I don’t know if I am creative or not. Creativity coaching can help you discover the truth about your creativity.

BALANCE YOUR CREATIVITY AND THE REST OF YOUR LIFE: If I don’t write regularly, I begin to feel trapped. Creativity coaching can help you discover the truth about your creativity.

DISCOVER PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS AND OTHER NETWORKING OUTLETS: Where do I find artist in my artistic discipline? Creativity coaching can help you increase your business skills.

CREATE CONCRETE PLANS FOR YOUR ARTISTIC BUSINESS: How do I write a business plan, when my art isn’t even selling? Creativity coaching can help you increase your business skills.

FIND AN ARTISTIC MENTOR OR BUDDY: Where can I find an artistic mentor or buddy? Creativity coaching can help you expand your support network.

Copyright 2005 Writer’s Eye Advisory Service

Lael Johnson, owner of Writer’s Eye Advisory Service, offers creativity coaching services and additional writing resources at: http://www.writerseye.com/creativitycoaching/index.shtml

The Creativity Creed

I believe that creativity is a natural order of life itself and it provides my life with the purest of energies.

I believe there is an underlying creative force infusing throughout my life.

I believe that when I open my creativity, I am opening the Creator’s creativity.

I believe creativity is part of my destiny and just as important as all living things.

I believe creativity is my Creator’s gift to me. Using my creativity is my gift back to him.

I believe expectation of a fulfilling life attracts with powerful changes when I allow creativity to flow through my beingness.

I believe it is safe for me to discover my own creativity even if it sets new paths not yet discovered.

I believe as I move more towards my creative self, I move towards my own divinity.

I believe I am worth the time it takes to create whatever it is I am to create.

I believe I have the right to have all the creativity I deserve.

I believe that when I allow my creativity to flow throughout my life, I tap into the source of all that there is and all that ever was.

I believe that the time I spend creating is as precious as anything else in life.

I believe that as creativity gives to me, so does she deserve from me all my faith mindfulness and commitment.

I believe in my creative self.

I believe in me.

(c) Copyright, Catherine Franz. All rights reserved.

Catherine Franz is a writer and author of over 1800 published articles and several books on various business subjects. http://www.abundancecenter.com

It’s A Quantum Thing

We don’t need to understand quantum physics entirely in order to appreciate it. Even those who have devoted their lives to the study of the universe and its atomic structure will admit that many mysteries remain. Well, I love mysteries, so let’s set the scene for this one…

There’s a Big Bang. “Whoosh!” go all the molecules. Much swirling commences. Fast forward 12 billion years (give or take a billion) to present day. People all over the world watch sci-fi movies, read physics texts, attend harmonic convergence gatherings, study nanotechnology, and gaze at the stars. Our questions: How did we get here? Who are we? Where is here? Why? What next?

If you’re expecting quantum theory to answer those questions, you’re going to be disappointed. However, it does give us some heady new ways to anticipate those answers.

Let’s take a look at some terms. Back in the fifth century BC, our Greek friend Democritus had the idea that all matter is ultimately made up of tiny grains that cannot be divided into smaller pieces. He called these little pieces “atoms” for the Greek phrase “a-tomos” which means “uncuttable”. Poor Democritus didn’t have the advantage of sophisticated microscopes, so it’s not surprising that, centuries later, it was discovered that atoms are actually cuttable. In fact, atoms are themselves made up of tiny particles we’ve dubbed neutrons, protons, electrons and neutrinos.

But it doesn’t stop there. Now we’re thinking that leptons, along with quarks, are the tiniest of particles of all and currently considered the ultimate building blocks of nature. Since we keep finding particles inside particles and adding new names to pieces of atoms, it’s easier to refer to the smallest chunks into which something can be divided as quanta. The German physicist Max Planck first proposed that energy might come in little pieces called quanta back in the early 1900s. So when we talk about quantum theory, we’re just referring to the whole set of ideas surrounding the microscopic world of atoms.

Along comes Albert Einstein, who recognizes that this whole idea of quantum physics turns classical physics on its head and spins it around. Here all these scientists had developed theories and precise formulas for calculating predictably and consistently the ways in which bodies move. Now there’s this idea that little particles actually behave in ways we can’t predict with certainty. These tiny quanta are mysterious. They respond sometimes as particles, and sometimes as waves, and we can’t always tell which way they’re going to go. If a particle is traveling from point A to point B, we can guess its path, but the tinier the particle, the less sure we are that that exact path is the one taken. In fact—hold on to your hat here—we’ve come to understand that not only do we not know the exact path, but that the particles may actually be in two places at once.

Think that’s radical? Back in 1957, a Princeton graduate student named Hugh Everett proposed what is called the “Many Worlds” interpretation. According to his dissertation, quantum theory (the variable behavior of atoms) is true not just for atoms but for everything—like tables, flower pots, SUVs, and even people. Everett was actually stating that these big things could, like tiny pieces of atoms, be in many places at once.

It gets wilder. Everett hypothesized that if you observe a sports utility vehicle (SUV) which is in two places at once, your mind will also end up in two states at once—one which perceives that SUV in one place, and another which perceives it in another place! So, really, there would be two versions of you and each one would perceive a world in which there is a different version of the SUV. Not only that, but these two selves and these two SUVs don’t exist in a vacuum. They actually interact with each other!

This whole concept of multiple realities was a big boon for science fiction writers. The truth is that these ideas are generally considered plausible but not in relation to the large-scale world. We don’t have a way of manifesting alternate universes full of multiple SUVs (thankfully) so we can’t really test it.

But there is one area of the Big World (that which we can see without microscopes) that will be completely revolutionized by quantum theory, and that’s the development of quantum computers. In quantum computers, experimenters are taking advantage of the ability of particles such as atoms to be in many places at once to do many calculations simultaneously.

Talk about high-speed connections. Quantum computers could solve in seconds problems that would take conventional computers millions of years to decipher.

We’re talking WAY beyond quickly downloading your email, obviously. What does this mean for the world? What will these quantum computers do? The staggering truth is that a quantum computer will actually perform in different realities—it will be engaging huge numbers of versions of other computers in alternate universes.

Freaky, huh? But real, and coming soon—or at least, eventually.

Next time you find yourself daydreaming about how your life could be different, ramp it up a notch. Think about quantum physics and the Many Worlds theory. Consider that your life might already be different in some other reality! If it’s possible that it exists exactly as you dream it, there’s no reason you can’t create it here. And heck, you only have to do it in one universe. Piece of cake!

Make that multiple pieces.

About The Author

Maya Talisman Frost is a mind masseuse. Her work has inspired thinkers in over 90 countries. To subscribe to her free weekly ezine, the Friday Mind Massage, visit http://www.massageyourmind.com.

maya@massageyourmind.com

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