Lessons Learned…
Creativity Unwrapped 9
It
was an ordinary July morning about to become an extraordinary one as well as an
indelibly etched memory simply because of the word “yes,” which is creativity’s
favorite word. In a world of “no’s,” where everyone has a reason why not, why
you shouldn’t or can’t, why it’s ridiculous or a great waste of time, or what
would clearly be better, which is all about those who are the naysayers and how
their ideas trump anything thing else on the table, the brave, small voice of
yes fiercely fights to stand firm and hold open the door of possibility.
Nothing crushes the possibility or the actuality of creativity more completely
than a no face, a no spirit, or a no personality, yet no is easiest answer,
because, like a hot knife through butter, it cuts off the inefficiency and
messiness associated with creativity and keeps us all neatly in lock-step,
robotic and only superficially engaged. Once you say yes, the lid of Pandora’s
box flies to the wind and time is caught up in the swirling wonder of
imagination; a place of play and a place of seeing things differently. This is a precious place where joy and
innovation collide and burst together into a splash of technicolor brilliance. It
was pouring with rain this hot July morning, and it had been pouring with rain
on and off over a number of days in a row. Inside activities, experiments, and
projects were ongoing in every corner, when one of my sons casually presented
the genuine wish of his heart in that moment, “I really would like to go
snowboarding today.” In the nanosecond subsequent to the proclaimed wish, my
mind raced between yes and no, why and why not, practical or impractical,
possible or impossible, ridiculous or exhilarating, and I attempted to buy a
pinch of time with the obvious question,
where could we go in July? As if the
entire seemingly problematic gap between winter and summer had been fully
scrutinized and mentally bridged, hence resolved, prior to the question, the
response was simply and immediately, mud is as slippery as snow. Hmmm. Of
course. So with the yes door flung wide
open, we loaded the board in the car and set out in the pouring rain to find
steep enough muddy hills adequately suitable for mud-boarding. The perfect hill
was discovered. He was absolutely right
about mud being slippery as snow. Run
after run after run with increasing laughter, increasing rain soaked mud caked
clothes, and increasing competence on the mud slope, my son lived his July
wish. Joy. Test and full affirmation of what to some no faces might have seemed
a ridiculous impractical impossibility. An idea dreamed, an idea tried, a wish
fulfilled. All because of yes. Every yes
most certainly builds significant confidence toward the next new idea, which is
exactly the place where creativity loves to dwell. Are there enough yes’s at
school? Are there enough yes’s at home? Are we wearing yes faces enough so that
this next generation of dreamers can imagine, then plan, then build an exciting
and hopeful future?
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