BEST IDEAS IN THE SHOWER

BEST IDEAS IN THE SHOWER

BEST IDEAS IN THE SHOWER

Feb 7, 2023

Feb 7, 2023

Feb 7, 2023

Having a creative mind in a same old, same old mundane world is often difficult to reconcile. In Harry Potter terms it's like being a Wizard in a world of Muggles.

The trouble is that it’s about 10,000 times easier to have an idea than it is to implement it. Hence you have to find a linkage between what you conceive and its relevance to anyone else – so that they might help you make it happen or at least buy it from you.

But why do we seem to have the best ideas whilst we’re in a shower and nowhere near a pen and paper?

Well, science has explained this phenomenon and once again it’s really straightforward. When the body feels a rush of warmth on the skin from the water, it sends a signal of relaxation to the brain, which increases our Dopamine Stores. The more dopamine; the more creative we tend to be.

Another trigger for creativity is that of distraction, especially if you have thought long and hard all day about a problem. Jumping into the shower can turn into what scientists call the “incubation period” for your ideas. The subconscious mind that has been working hard to solve problems now lets itself wander, allowing it to plant the ideas into your conscious mind.

Sadly there aren’t many books or resources to help make this happen – there are a few management tomes about organizing creative people in business but not much on how to live a meaningful life in a world run by bureaucrats.

It’s a paradox that the more left wing a government is, the more centralized the decision making is - and the more administrators we have to have to implement the explosion of rules and regulation they impose.

Art and culture flourished most under capitalist patronage in the Renaissance and was corrupted and suppressed most under the totalitarian Nazi and communist states. There’s a lovely line in the movie “The Third Man” written by Graham Greene. “In Italy under the Borgias – they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed and what did that produce? Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. Meanwhile in Switzerland they had 500 years of democracy and peace and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock.”

I reckon we're suffering from too much peace and we need some adversity or a jolly good war to sort out what’s really important in life.

Meanwhile, with nothing else to worry about, talentless drones in government departments who occupy the tallest buildings get the best resources and have meetings about doing nothing in case someone is offended.

Having a creative mind in a same old, same old mundane world is often difficult to reconcile. In Harry Potter terms it's like being a Wizard in a world of Muggles.

The trouble is that it’s about 10,000 times easier to have an idea than it is to implement it. Hence you have to find a linkage between what you conceive and its relevance to anyone else – so that they might help you make it happen or at least buy it from you.

But why do we seem to have the best ideas whilst we’re in a shower and nowhere near a pen and paper?

Well, science has explained this phenomenon and once again it’s really straightforward. When the body feels a rush of warmth on the skin from the water, it sends a signal of relaxation to the brain, which increases our Dopamine Stores. The more dopamine; the more creative we tend to be.

Another trigger for creativity is that of distraction, especially if you have thought long and hard all day about a problem. Jumping into the shower can turn into what scientists call the “incubation period” for your ideas. The subconscious mind that has been working hard to solve problems now lets itself wander, allowing it to plant the ideas into your conscious mind.

Sadly there aren’t many books or resources to help make this happen – there are a few management tomes about organizing creative people in business but not much on how to live a meaningful life in a world run by bureaucrats.

It’s a paradox that the more left wing a government is, the more centralized the decision making is - and the more administrators we have to have to implement the explosion of rules and regulation they impose.

Art and culture flourished most under capitalist patronage in the Renaissance and was corrupted and suppressed most under the totalitarian Nazi and communist states. There’s a lovely line in the movie “The Third Man” written by Graham Greene. “In Italy under the Borgias – they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed and what did that produce? Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. Meanwhile in Switzerland they had 500 years of democracy and peace and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock.”

I reckon we're suffering from too much peace and we need some adversity or a jolly good war to sort out what’s really important in life.

Meanwhile, with nothing else to worry about, talentless drones in government departments who occupy the tallest buildings get the best resources and have meetings about doing nothing in case someone is offended.

Having a creative mind in a same old, same old mundane world is often difficult to reconcile. In Harry Potter terms it's like being a Wizard in a world of Muggles.

The trouble is that it’s about 10,000 times easier to have an idea than it is to implement it. Hence you have to find a linkage between what you conceive and its relevance to anyone else – so that they might help you make it happen or at least buy it from you.

But why do we seem to have the best ideas whilst we’re in a shower and nowhere near a pen and paper?

Well, science has explained this phenomenon and once again it’s really straightforward. When the body feels a rush of warmth on the skin from the water, it sends a signal of relaxation to the brain, which increases our Dopamine Stores. The more dopamine; the more creative we tend to be.

Another trigger for creativity is that of distraction, especially if you have thought long and hard all day about a problem. Jumping into the shower can turn into what scientists call the “incubation period” for your ideas. The subconscious mind that has been working hard to solve problems now lets itself wander, allowing it to plant the ideas into your conscious mind.

Sadly there aren’t many books or resources to help make this happen – there are a few management tomes about organizing creative people in business but not much on how to live a meaningful life in a world run by bureaucrats.

It’s a paradox that the more left wing a government is, the more centralized the decision making is - and the more administrators we have to have to implement the explosion of rules and regulation they impose.

Art and culture flourished most under capitalist patronage in the Renaissance and was corrupted and suppressed most under the totalitarian Nazi and communist states. There’s a lovely line in the movie “The Third Man” written by Graham Greene. “In Italy under the Borgias – they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed and what did that produce? Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. Meanwhile in Switzerland they had 500 years of democracy and peace and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock.”

I reckon we're suffering from too much peace and we need some adversity or a jolly good war to sort out what’s really important in life.

Meanwhile, with nothing else to worry about, talentless drones in government departments who occupy the tallest buildings get the best resources and have meetings about doing nothing in case someone is offended.