š If you havenāt yet, check out gregslist.ai for super fast, simple and free AI product discovery.
There are many pervasive misconceptions about creativity: that itās innate, that it only involves the arts, that itās spontaneous and chaotic, that it canāt be taught, that itās reserved for certain types of people, that itās linked to high intelligence, and that itās limited by constraints.
Most of these are wrong, and those that arenāt are damaging.
You and I can learn to build creativity and form novel, valuable ideas with our imaginations.
To focus the mind on what happens and what makes it happen. ā VII. 30
Iāve been thinking about this a lot lately. My daily immersion with LLMs has been a catalyst.
Letās break this down in a more intimate meditation than usual.
Purposefully Creating Idea-Rich Environments
Iāve written before about ācollecting environmentsā as a forcing function for change. But when your daily work environment shifts, as mine has, it requires a reset. Luckily, idea-rich environments come from many places.
I curate a diverse podcast playlist, rotating through it on long bike rides. Some of my favorites include founders, invest like the best, idea cast, and pivot. There are many more.
I read a different book on a different subjectāoften something Iām unfamiliar withāat least once a month. It could be Art of Learning, Broken Money, or the The Fifth Risk.
I explore new and interesting subreddits, many of which I donāt personally identify with but help me understand what others are thinking about (though I must warn, this can be a dangerous rabbit hole).
And then I create a subconscious stew. I let these diverse inputs marinate and set a mental timer to check back on them later.
When the Timer Dings: Practicing Divergent Thinking
I mentioned journaling in my first essay in this series, Personal Intellectual Leverage. Iām constantly in my notes, and my app of choice is Bear. Iāve been using it for years. Itās where I keep a repository of free-flow thinking.
With the stew of ideas as a base, I write down my thoughts furiously, without abandon. Iām often surprised by how much I generate after giving the subconscious time to work. Sometimes the dish is fully refined; other times, it needs a little more time to cook.
Breaking Routine to Stimulate Creativity
Iāve developed a knack for maintaining solid routinesāand for knowing when to break them. Variety is absolutely critical for the imagination. Whether itās how you exercise, how you sleep, what you eat, how and where you work, or how you wind down, routine can become a constraint. Once something becomes routine, it no longer stimulates.
Switching it up, based not just on time but on a feeling honed through experience, is my key.
Capitalizing on Momentum
This is the hardest part to cultivate, but itās also the most potent. When inspiration strikesāthrough the refinement of inputs (some may call this āspontaneity,ā but I see it as a purposeful, delayed reaction)āI act on it. This might mean sitting down to write or program for hours, even if Iām tired or had other plans. It could happen late at night, early in the morning, or anywhere in between. The key is to seize the spark of creativity when it ignites.
Killing your darlings
Iāve learned to love killing my ideasāor at least their first, second, and third versions. Creativity thrives on trial and error, iteration, and collaboration. Stress-testing ideas with others helps massively, and combining elements from different disciplines leads to evolutionary, and sometimes revolutionary, thinking. Thatās one of the key benefits of divergent thinking.
Final Thoughts
Repeat: My daily immersion with LLMs has been a catalyst for this lately.
Much of the positioning for AIās benefit has been not surprisingly misplaced. We live in a world driven by efficiencyāfaster, better, cheaper, more productiveāand the view on where AIās greatest value lies.
But I believe thatās only 5% of the equation. The real 95% lies in AIās ability to help us build creativity, push boundaries, and rediscover joy in the process. Personally, as a āthinking partnerā to open up a blank page or canvas and start. Professionally, by replacing the kinds of work that should no longer require us. But in the latter, the benefit isnāt efficiencyāitās liberation.
When weāre free to think beyond the confines of today, we can say, āLetās build something new.ā Itās not about taking away, but what it inspires us to create.
The future isnāt just about faster.
Itās about freer.