Tag: Creativity

  • My Musical Muse

    Okay, I Confess. I don’t have one.

    Looking for a muse or waiting for inspiration is a huge waste of time. Whether it’s playing violin, composing music, or making any form of art, I don’t wait for good luck to happen—I don’t even believe in luck. I don’t wait for the planets to align or the night before a deadline. I use a strategy to be creative.

    Yes, I use the left side of my brain to activate my right.

    My go-to strategy for getting creative, brainstorming, planning, and organizing is to use a Mind Map. My second strategy, which I use in my Mind Mapping is The Creative Process, which I explain heavily in my book Hardwired for Creativity: Art Supplies for the Mind available on Amazon.

    Mind Maps are quick and can be done alone, with a partner, or with a group—two heads are better than one and five are better than that. Scary, huh? Mind Maps can also solve any problem. Seriously, try it.

    The beauty of a Mind Map is that it forces us to be non-linear thinkers. Linear thinking, such as A, B, C or 1, 2, 3., tends to stall or stop the Creative Spirit. Non-Linear thinkers tap into the Creative Spirit easily and are too often misunderstood for their efforts. Just because we jump from A to Q and then G, does not mean there’s something wrong with us. It means we can think all the way into and around the issue before putting it in order.

    The Creative Process is very similar to the Scientific Process. The Creative Process includes these five steps:

    1. Exploration, Research and Analysis
    2. Ideation and Brainstorming
    3. Designing and Planning
    4. Developing and Producing
    5. Evaluating the Solution for Improvement

    NOTE: Each step of the process is enriched by using imagination and play, also in Hardwired for Creativity: Art Supplies for the Mind.

    All That Said…

    I’m mature in my creativity skills and The Creative Process is just part of who I am. But not so much with playing the violin or composing music. I’m new at this music stuff and can I just say, “It’s hard!”

    Honestly, I have never even tried The Creative Process to write a song, learn a song, or as an approach to playing. I can see it now. I can Mind Map words to a song and maybe even a melody with rhythm. Then I can take the Map and organize the chorus, verses, etc. Humm, I’ve been waiting for a muse and maybe even some luck.

    Guess I have some work to do.