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Small Change - January 2004

Small Change is a free ezine from Shannon Bradford to help you get more done, feel less stressed, and enjoy more success.

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IN THIS ISSUE
On My Mind: The Tyranny of Technology

Thinkology® Tools: Creative Resolve

Shared Assets: Lily Tomlin on The Rat Race

 

ON MY MIND

The Tyranny of Technology

Over the holidays, I listened to a program on National Public Radio about how technology, specifically the internet and e-mail, is impacting our lives. Callers on the program talked about feeling anxious anytime they were out of touch with their e-mail, as well as about the stress of feeling constantly hounded by communications technology – pagers, PDAs, e-mail, voice mail, and so on. 

One of the thoughts this program triggered for me is how difficult it is, in this electronic age, to make time for creativity instead of productivity. It’s easy to get caught up in the cycle of constant productivity – answering e-mail, churning out reports, returning phone calls – and never make time for creative thinking. 

My resolution this year is to make time in my day for creativity. If you would like to play along, I outline my strategy in Thinkology Tools, below.

Wishing you a creative and productive 2004. 

Warm Regards,
Shannon Bradford

P.S. Think you’re not the creative type? Stay tuned, as we debunk the Creativity Myth in a future issue of Small Change.

THINKOLOGY® TOOLS
Creative Resolve 

One of the reasons it is difficult to make time for creativity in our frenetic working lives is that creativity has a different rhythm and a different thinking pattern than productivity. Creative thinking is slower, while productivity is often a race against the clock. Creativity is not linear, it requires the time and space to wander freely among thoughts and ideas, without being tied to an outcome. Productivity is more linear, focused, and outcome-driven.

To meet my goal of balancing productivity with more creative time, I plan to use these seven tactics:

1-I will schedule creative time as I would any other appointment.
2-During my creative time, I will close my e-mail program, so that new-mail chime won’t snap me back to productivity mode.
3-I will resist the urge to “produce” and let my mind wander and daydream.
4-I will use creative fodder to spark ideas: magazines, books, or surfing the web.
5-I will have colored markers and blank paper for making mind maps or doodling to exercise my non-linear thinking muscles.
6-When I have difficulty breaking the productivity rhythm, I’ll take a walk (if it’s not freezing cold outside).
7-I will set a timer to remind me when it’s time to switch back to productivity mode, so I won’t have to watch the clock.

 

SHARED ASSETS (Great Quotes)

Lily Tomlin

On The Rat Race

“The trouble with being in the rat race is that even if you win, you’re still a rat.”