Big Ideas by Jennifer Beckstrand and Craig Case
Welcome to Mary's Garden. Today we have two guests who will give us some unique tips on ideas.
But first... yup you have it. Here is a gardening tip for a beginning from an gardening article in Readers Digest.
You have problems—mind-bending,
frustrating, annoying problems. You need solutions. You need good ideas, and
you need to know how to get them. Where do you start in the search for ideas?
And not just good ideas, but profound, focused, life-changing ideas?
And now welcome Jennifer Beckstrand and Craig Case.
Big ideas.
Is it possible to boost your
creativity? To discover far-reaching solutions to difficult problems? To
develop innovative ideas that not only improve your life but catapult it in a
better direction? Yes, it is.
Every great discovery, creation, or
invention has its genesis in a problem. The search for solutions is how big
ideas come about. And big ideas can change the world.
In
our new book, Big Ideas: How to Unleash
Your Creative Self and Have More Aha! Moments, we tell you how to train
your brain to get more inspiration, generate better ideas, and unleash your
creativity. The book is full of practical ideas that you can apply today to
help you be a better thinker.
Writing
is just one of those practical ideas. Many of history’s greatest thinkers like
Julian of Norwich, Galileo, Hypatia, Aristotle, Plato, Teresa of Avila,
Shakespeare, and Kepler were dedicated writers. They are remembered in part,
because they wrote down their ideas. Over 30,000 pages of Da Vinci’s personal
notes were found in his home after his death. Thomas Edison filled 3,000
notebooks of 280 pages each documenting his experiments and ideas.
In
a recent workshop, we discussed the idea of writing as a method for developing
insights and getting more Aha! Moments. A twenty-two-year-old in the class
rejected the idea of carrying a journal wherever he went. He said the idea
simply wouldn’t work for most people his age. Holding up his phone, he said he
could text anything more quickly than writing it out. We agreed with him
regarding speed. Watching how quickly and effortlessly most people navigate
their phones, we know his observation is accurate.
But
speed is not the goal when trying to capture and develop complex thoughts and
ideas. Writing about an idea, pen to paper, actually creates neural connections
that lead to big ideas. The creative part of the brain does its best work when
it slows down, which is one of the reasons handwriting is vital to creativity
and innovation.
Advancements
in technology tie us closer together than ever before, revolutionizing what it
means to communicate. We call our loved ones from thousands of miles away. We
use FaceTime and Skype. We text and email each other at the push of a button.
While these advancements have undoubtedly improved our lives, they also greatly
inhibit our ability to think and create.
We
need to think on a deeper level than in a text laced with emojis, acronyms, and
abbreviations. As handy as it is, the smart phone has its limits as a tool for
elevated thinking.
Handwriting
vs. Typing
Research
indicates that handwriting is vastly more beneficial to learning and innovative
thinking than
typing or keyboarding. Handwriting slows down the brain, and when
you’re in alpha mode, you accelerate cerebral connections and increase the
likelihood of inspired ideas.
Craig Case |
Research
by Virginia Berninger, a professor at the University of Washington, shows that
writing in cursive activates massive regions in the brain involved in thinking,
language, and working memory, the systems for temporarily storing and managing
information. Keyboarding only activates a single region of the brain.
Recent
research on college courses shows that taking notes by hand is better than
taking notes on a laptop, particularly for capturing and remembering conceptual
information. The very act of using a pen or pencil helps you better retain
information. People capture and recall up to 30 percent more information when
they’ve taken handwritten notes rather than typed ones.
Handwriting
requires more effort than keyboarding, and the mental effort helps the brain
make critical connections. The more effort you put into understanding
something, the stronger signal you're giving your brain of its importance,
which enhances the inspiration process.
"When
we write, a unique neural circuit is automatically activated," says
psychologist Daniel M. Oppenheimer. "There is a core recognition of the
gesture in the written word, a sort of recognition by mental simulation in your
brain, it seems that this circuit is contributing in unique ways we didn't
realize.” The
result? Learning is easier, connections occur, and inspired ideas flow.
Big Ideas is now available on Kindle and will be released in book
form on December 7. For more ideas on how to maximize your brain’s creative
power, go to bigideastraining.com and join our Facebook group at Big Ideas: Unleash Your Creative Self.
Thank you, Jennifer, for visiting.
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