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This Month's Mind Flexors 

Mind Flexors are concise exercises to practice the six characteristics listed below. If you put on ice skates and skate a little bit each day for the next year, you will definitely be better on ice at year's end. Research and common sense tells us that regular flexing of your creativity capacity will make it easier for you to be creative on demand. 

Mind Flexors are designed to be fun and to exercise your mind. You don't have to do all of them to increase your creativity, but practice never hurts! Some people who have attended TMI's Unbind Your Mind creativity class share ideas across e-mail or do the exercises with colleagues or family. 

There are no correct answers to the Mind Flexors. Give yourself permission to think of as unusual answers as possible.   

  A dooglehouser is a new household appliance. Describe it and tell its function. 

  A kaboom is a part of all modern automobiles. What is its function? 

  You are walking through the woods and see a strange looking animal making the sound, "Snork, snork, snork." You are later told by a zoologist that a new species has been discovered and that it makes the "snork" sound. This zoologist has never seen this new species. Tell the zoologist what you saw. 

  You are visiting Tongo Bongo, and the local people offer you one of their most prized delicacies. It is called, "Gliff." Describe its appearance, its taste and odor, the manner in which it is served and how it is eaten. 

  We stack beds (bunk beds) and washer/dryers units for apartments. What else might be stacked that we commonly use as single units? 

  Finish this joke with as many endings as you can think of: The boss comes in early one day and finds the bookkeeper kissing the secretary. "Is this what I pay you for?" he demands. "No," replies the bookkeeper : "_______________________________." 

  There is a new soap opera on television called "Green Visions." What is it about, and where is its primary setting. 
 

Unbind Your Mind - Six Characteristics 


People who rank high in the following six characteristics tend to be more creative:  

Fluency of ideas: The more creative you are, the more ideas you can produce in a given time. If your brain can rapidly produce 30 ideas, it does not matter if most of them are of little value. You say that one good idea is better than 30 bad or mediocre ideas, but it can take 30 ideas to produce one good idea. Most people do not produce their best ideas until their brain has sorted through some average ideas. It is almost as if the brain needs to get warmed up in the same way athletes put their bodies through warm-up periods before competition or training.  

Withholding of judgment: If you delay your judgments, you will get more high quality ideas when you are brainstorming. When you judge, you are looking for what does not work or fit, rather than possibilities. It is within possibilities that creativity sits.  

Tolerance of ambiguity: Tolerance of ambiguity is the ability to live in a universe where there are no right or wrong answers, where ideas or thoughts are vague and yet unformed. There are two sides to this ability: willingness to see both sides of the same coin, and willingness to stay in the questioning phase before rushing to an answer.  

Flexibility and imagination: Creativity demands flexible thinking, almost a childlike attitude of wonderment. To be creative, you must operate as if the world can be as you create it.  

Concentration: This is the ability to stay focused on a subject, even while you feel frustrated or bored. It is the ability to ignore distractions while trying to solve problems or accomplish something. Concentration and determination are critical aspects of creativity.  

Preference for disorder: Creative people tend to like disorder. This does not necessarily mean mess. One of the stereotypes of creative people is that of the messy inventor or writer with piles of paper everywhere. Mess has little to do with creativity. Disorder is something else. Preference for disorder refers to asymmetry in design, nonlinear thinking, or shaking up the normal order.  
 

Previous "Mind Flexor" selections: 
#1    #2    #3  
 
 
TMI, USA has a complete book of 365 Mind Flexors exercises available. It is authored by Janelle Barlow, Ph.D. and is titled, Mind Flexors. We will also publish here new (never before seen!) Mind Flexors--seven at a time each month. We invite our readers to add their own creativity to this list, and we'll credit you with your contribution. We'll also list your creative answers on this page if you send them to us. 
 

Creativity Training Program  

Unbind Your Mind & Mind Flexors Publications 

 
 
 
 
 

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