Psychologists used to believe the left brain analyzed with an involvement of sequential thinking and the right brain handled creativity.
The movement developed toward the front-back brain division. The front brain became the gatekeeper and controlled the input from the back brain.
Now we think it’s more complicated than either model. It depends upon which stage of the creative process you’re in.
Dr. Carson feels contentment is the enemy of creativity because the creative mind constantly hungers for stimulation.
Creativity involves novelty-seeking. Studies of cognitive behavior have shown you can change brain activation states, alter neurotransmitter levels and the receptors for those neurotransmitters and receptors. Dr. Carson believes, “if we have the ability to change our brains with cognitive behavior therapy, why not use that power to become more novelty-seeking and more creative?’
Carson adds, to increase creativity, “keep learning new things. Take courses, read widely, and learn how to play a new instrument or how to cook Tuscan food. Learn, learn, learn! Second, try not to judge the things you’re learning. Keep an open mind. Everything you learn is a possible element that may make its way into some future creative idea that you can’t even imagine today. And the more open-minded you remain about what you learn, the more likely you are to see how it can be combined with other information to form a novel and original product or idea."
What could you do to develop a novelty-seeking ability in your life today?
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