Peopleware
How to Improve Your Creative Thinking 6 minutes read.
"Even with the best tools available to turn our creative ideas into something more tangible, though, we still need to provide the initial seed of an idea and be able to judge whether we’re heading in the right direction. We’re still the creative directors of our own minds." -- Alice Albrecht with so many gems I've learned from. For example: "To widen our divergent thinking funnel, we could try and seek out new ideas that are maximally different from our own, but this typically won’t work. It’s actually better to make incremental steps outside your own filter bubble because new information must overlap somewhat with what you already know to be effectively associated and assimilated. Read voraciously and engage deeply with a wide variety of content to build a richer memory bank for you to tap."
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The Need to Read 3 minutes read.
"A good writer doesn't just think, and then write down what he thought, as a sort of transcript. A good writer will almost always discover new things in the process of writing. And there is, as far as I know, no substitute for this kind of discovery. Talking about your ideas with other people is a good way to develop them. But even after doing this, you'll find you still discover new things when you sit down to write. There is a kind of thinking that can only be done by writing. [...] People who just want information may find other ways to get it. But people who want to have ideas can't afford to." -- I often like thinking of "Read What You Love Until You Love to Read" as a way to build a healthy habit.
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Selfish Writing 4 minutes read.
Writing and reading are skills worth practicing as we enter a new year. Which goals around them would you put for yourself? "Grinding through this [writing] process reveals bits of context that are hopefully new discoveries to the reader. More importantly, they were likely new discoveries to the writer before they set out writing. [...] Many of the good writers you enjoy probably aren’t much smarter than you. They’ve just forced themselves through the process of transferring vague feelings into words and the clarity that generates. The takeaway for voracious readers is that you can discover new perspectives and new context by writing yourself."
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