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Creativity
3 Secrets to
Boosting Your Creativity
Subliminal Message Power
Top Ten Brainjuicers
By Linda Naiman
In order to enhance your creativity, your body and mind should be operating
at peak efficiency. Try these brainjuicers to boost your brain power.
1. Make sure you exercise.
Exercise juices up the brain with nutrients in the form of glucose. The more
glucose it uses, the more active the brain. It increases oxygen in the
bloodstream that is delivered to the brain, releases endorphins into the
bloodstream (the runner's high) and increases nerve connections to the brain.
2. Use rhythmic activities to give your brain a chance to incubate.
Any rhythmic activity such as running, walking, swimming, scrubbing, chopping
quiets mindful chatter, allowing your imagination to flow. Einstein got so many
ideas while showering he installed waterproof material to record his ideas.
3. Listen to music, especially music from Mozart's era.
Music forges new neural pathways that stimulate your creativity. Research shows
that music trains the brain for higher forms of thinking. In a study at U.C.
Irvine, researchers studied two groups of three year olds. One group studied
piano and sang daily in chorus. The other group did not. In eight months the
musical three year olds were adept puzzle masters. They scored 80% higher in
spatial intelligence than the non musical group. (Newsweek Feb.19, 1996)
4. Try Aroma Therapy to activate your brain.
One day, as I was falling asleep, while listening to endless speeches at a
conference, my brain suddenly perked up when I caught a whiff of lemon from
someone's cologne. I immediately felt alert and found it much easier to pay
attention to the presenter. I discovered aroma therapy really is useful and I
have used it ever since revitalize or to relax.
Energizers include peppermint, cypress and lemon. Relaxants: ylang ylang,
geranium and rose. A few drops of essential oils in your bath or in a diffuser
will do the trick. You can also put a drop or two in a cotton ball or hanky and
inhale. One caveat for the workplace; make sure no-one is allergic to the oils
before you use them.
5. Eat foods high in Vitamin B.
Vitamin B is essential for brain power. Sources include peas, beans, liver,
kidney, chicken and eggs.
6. Get your minerals.
Boron is essential for memory and attention. Sources include apples, pears and
green leafy vegetables.
7. Instead of coffee breaks try gingko biloba and gotu kola herbal teas.
Gingko biloba and gotu kola increase blood flow to the brain. (Check with your
doctor first before taking these herbs.)
8. Capture your daydreams.
Daydreaming is a way to incubate the components of a problem and uncover
solutions. How can you apply the images and thoughts of your daydream to the
project you are working on? How could the image be a metaphor? Can your daydream
show you a new perspective?
9. Play with passion!
You can't do great work without personal fulfillment. When people are growing
through learning and creativity, they are much more fulfilled and give 127% more
to their work. Delight yourself and you delight the world. Remember what you
loved to do as a child and bring the essence of that activity into your work.
This is a clue to your genius; to your natural gifts and talents. da Vinci,
Edison, Einstein and Picasso all loved to play and they loved to explore.
10. Build a brain trust.
Surround yourself with inspiring people from a wide variety of fields who
encourage you and stimulate your creativity. Read magazines from a wide variety
of fields. Make connections between people, places and things, to discover new
business opportunities, and to find solutions to your problems.
There is a famous story about the inventor of Velcro, who happened to have an
interest in botany. One day he was walking through a field, when he noticed
burrs sticking to his socks. He wondered what made them stick and picked one up
to examine its structure. Well you know what happened...
About the Author:
Linda Naiman is a Corporate Alchemist who uses the arts as a strategic tool to
help organizations turn leaden thinking into gold. She provides training
consulting and coaching focused on creativity leadership and innovation. She is
co-author with Arthur VanGundy of "Orchestrating Collaboration at Work" (Wiley
2003) and publishes a popular newsletter on her website at
www.creativityatwork.com. Linda can be contacted at 604-327-1565.
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