How You Are Destroying Your Creativity and Imagination

Mike Schoultz
5 min readSep 30, 2018

Have you ever done any reading about Einstein and his writing on creativity and imagination?

I am a great fan of Albert Einstein and have written about many of his stories. No greater source than Albert Einstein said the true sign of intelligence is not knowledge, but imagination. As such, it is almost an indignity when learners are forced to stuff themselves full of facts without bowing to the greater good of creativity and imagination. It is by far the most overlooked part of a person’s learning and a great way to destroy creativity and imagination.

Truth be told, many peoples have a rich and varied creativity and imagination that can eke its way out if given a chance. These include musical, spatial, linguistic, math, relationships and others that serve as a good base for developing both creativity as well as imagination.

But let’s examine those ways we limit our creative and imaginative abilities. Here are the most obvious ways you destroy your creativity and imagination. And more importantly some important pointers on what you should do to eliminate them:

Maintain the status quo

Working with a few new activities and new environments is a guaranteed way to limit both your imagination and creativity. The true enemy of imagination is the acceptance of the status quo.

What to do:

Try to do and experience many new things. Do things differently. This could be as simple as taking a new route to work or perhaps learning how to write with both hands. The true enemy of imagination is the acceptance of the status quo.

Accept average quality

Have you occasionally noticed that you are spending most of your time on the wrong priorities? Doing much more but everything at an average quality? No time for imagination or creativity in anything?

What to do:

Think about your priorities and how you can make things better. A man just made a small fortune redesigning the fork. He made a wood model of one, watched how people used the fork, and imagined a better version. It can cut on both sides, fits into the hand better, and has dull tongs to grip pasta better. He picked his priority and stuck with it.

Limited view of imagination

Are you constraining your view of what imagination really is? Shouldn’t be very many constraints should there?

What to do:

First, break the habit of seeing imagination as only appropriate for art or music. Almost every article written on imagination is about music or art. Despite the fact, many other significant bits of intelligence need to be encouraged.

To stretch this limited view of imagination; note that everything you use has been invented by someone who applied imagination to solving a problem. Think about who invented the pocket or the wheel and how they used better observation skills to increases the awareness of possibilities. So the first priority is to give yourself problems to solve, and as this naturally develops, it encourages imagination. Indeed, problem-solving is nothing more than applied imagination at work.

Always evaluate imagination

Do you evaluate your imagination or creativity? Again this can limit your out of the box thinking.

What to do:

Don’t evaluate imagination. Don’t tell yourself that the imagined solution is bad or good. Don’t tell yourself why it will or wouldn’t work. Just explain it to yourself. The imagination cannot always be judged by those close to it, and truly imaginative work can require a long gestation. Outside of asking for an acceptable explanation of the work and having it done in a neat manner, judgment should be left until a later date.

Remember: How to Be Good at Your Imagination

Limit experiences

Do you lack an ability to explore and try new things? Does it make you feel uncomfortable?

What to do:

Observation is the mother of imagination. A person who is not exposed to new things cannot bring new thinking to a problem. For imagination to grow, a silo filled with resources must exist to feed it. The more experiences, the greater the imagination that can be brought to bear on potential solutions.

Don’t practice

Hate to practice and use new skills? Don’t think one can practice and improve skills like imagination and creativity?

What to do:

Creativity is like any other learned skill. Unless you are the rare minority, you weren’t born with amazing creativity skills and boundless imagination. You will need lots of practice and experience. And lots of failures and not so good results. Be patient and stick with it. All good skills take time.

Don’t collaborate

Avoid collaboration because you worry that others will recognize your undeveloped creativity and imagination?

What to do:

Collaboration drives creativity because new ideas always emerge from a series of sparks. Never a single flash of insight. Surround yourself with creative people in different fields. Learn from what they share. Find people that are also looking for collaboration and give it a try.

Limit play and experimentation

Are you one that works all the time? Believes that play is not an ingredient of work. And doesn’t like to experiment with new ideas because you abhor mistakes and failure?

What to do:

Actively play and experiment with new ideas. Keep an open mind and focus on continuous learning in new fields. Keep in mind that knowledge is what you already know; imagination is what makes it grow.

Don’t question authority

Do avoid questioning why things are done the way they are? Avoid questioning the decisions of bosses up the line?

What to do:

Don’t become a pain, but ask for explanations. And don’t hesitate to offer recommendations for change. Especially challenge the authority of your own longstanding beliefs.

Don’t think broad

Have a problem with a vision of what could be, especially in new fields of endeavor? Are you lacking confidence in expanding your horizon and setting aggressive goals?

What to do:

Make new friends in new fields and use their expertise to infuse new ideas into your thinking cap. Create diverse teams and rotate yourself into new projects and roles — especially ones you are fascinated by.

Limit your questions

Believe that questions can be a nuisance to those around you?

What to do:

Ask about everything that will help you learn and explore. After asking questions, ask different questions. After asking different questions, ask them in a different way.

Fear bad ideas

Do you fear to make mistakes and surfacing bad ideas? Don’t like failures?

What to do:

Remember people with bad ideas occasionally succeed far more often than people who have no ideas at all.

Someone asked me where I get all my good ideas, explaining that it takes him a month or two to come up with one and I seem to have more than that. I asked him how many bad ideas he has every month. He paused and said, “none.”

And there, you see, is the problem.

Mike Schoultz is a digital marketing and customer service expert. With 48 years of business experience, he consults on and writes about topics to help improve the performance of small business. You can find him and his writing on G+, Facebook, Twitter, Digital Spark Marketing, Pinterest, and LinkedIn.

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Mike Schoultz

Mike Schoultz writes about improving the performance of business. Bookmark his blog for stories and articles. www.digitalsparkmarketing.com