Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Make It Up Until You Get It Right

MAKE IT UP UNTIL YOU GET IT RIGHT

“Make visible what, without you, might perhaps
never have been seen”
-          Robert Bresson
Ola Joseph
           
When my editor sent me a message asking me “to change the focus of my article,” I knew I had to make something up and fast too.  But for three hours I sat in front of my computer staring at a blank screen.  Make something up? How does that sound?
            In our world, the expression, “I made it up,” or “To make something up” has a kind of negative connotation.   But in real sense, it is the best thing that can happen to us as individuals.
            Making things up is another way of expressing creativity or putting your creative mind to work.
            Creativity involves breaking ranks with established patterns in order to look at things in a different light.   Simply put, it “thinking outside the box.”
            What does a writer; have in common with a painter or a composer? The answer is: Creativity! They are creative, and they make things up.   A writer comes up with a page turner that holds the reader spellbound, while a painter or an artist may paint a picture that is worth tens of thousands of dollars.  A composer may come up with a piece of music that tickles the listener’s ears each time he or she hears it.
            When a writer sits and stares at a blank paper or when an artist stands staring at a blank canvas, he is not trying to repeat what has been created before.   Instead, he is trying to create what no one has ever created.   In some cases, he doesn’t even know what he is going to create.
            Most often, a creative person goes where his creative mind takes him.  A creative mind roams.   It roams the largest nation in the world, which according to my friend, Craig Valentine, is “Image nation” or “Imagination” and conjures up something that does not exist.
            The intriguing part of a creative person is that he loves what is created even before it exists.
Creativity involves breaking away from the established point of view in order to see things in a different light.   As Dr.  Wayne Dyer once put it, “when you change the way you look at something, what you look at changes.”
Creativity is a lonely art and largely a lonely struggle.   To some, creativity is a blessing.   To others it is a curse.   Imagine the struggle of a writer as he or she sits staring at a blank computer screen or an artist who stares at a blank canvas.   The reality however, is that creativity is the ability to reach inside of yourself and pull out from your very soul an idea which you did not know existed.
            Creative people are courageous and fearless.   And because of their courage, they are willing to make mistakes.   They are the ones who can think up crazy ideas knowing full well that their ideas may be worthless.  They don’t mind.  Creative people are flexible – they are able to change as the situation changes without breaking a sweat.   They are not threatened by the unexpected.
            For example, creative people do not mind starting out with little or no idea of where they are going.   In fact, if a creative person arrives at an expected result, it only shows that he/she has not fully used his/her creative abilities.  Creative mind takes you beyond your limitations.
            Most creative people rid themselves of all self-imposed limitations.   They are as free as the bird in the air.   They can soar while allowing the wind to take them wherever it pleases because they know full well that when they arrive, they will discover something new and unique.
            Being creative is like driving a car at night on a long, dark and unfamiliar road.   You never see further than your headlights, and you never know what awaits you beyond your headlights, but you’re willing to explore because you suspect you will love what you find.
            Creative activity could be likened to a learning process where the mentor and the “mentee” are located in the same body.
            As Henry Miller once pointed out, “There is the happiness which comes from creative effort.   The joy of dreaming, creating, building, whether in painting a picture, writing an epic, singing a song, composing a symphony, devising new invention, or creating a vast industry.”
            When next you find yourself staring at a blank screen or blank canvas, don’t get mad, just allow your creative mind to roam and “make something up.”
            Oh! By the way, I just made this up. Can you believe that?
Till I come your way again, I dare you to keep making things up♦
Ola Joseph,
Author/Speaker/Trainer


4 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. I love the subject and the ending- "make something up"

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  2. I really enjoyed this topic about creativity. in as much as i would want to admit that most times we want to invent new ideas but we are just lost at the beginning or in the middle of our taught thus stopping or not probing further. It really requires a lot of courage, enthusiasm and enough motivation to want to do something aside of the normal everyday trend outside there. To be creative requires us to just come out of our comfort zone and do something differently, it does not necessarily need to be extremely fantastic in the beginning but if we can actually dare ourselves to do things differently without minding if it is the most wonderful idea or not and with time there would room for improvement through other peoples appreciation, criticism, rejection, encouragement or acceptance. I think that would be a good start and beginning for any motivational person. Thank you for encouraging me to just endeavour to start; at list your editor advised u to make something up, while you were thinking of what to come up with , lost in the midst of your taught you came up with this inspirational write that has given me a reason to just make up something too or improve on what i already started. Thank you for this piece.

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  3. Yemi, Thanks for your comment. Stay blessed and keep the flag flying.

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