Friday, September 20, 2013

Is gathering the dots just as important as connecting them?

Sorensen Grundy


























We've all heard the phrase "connecting the dots" -- It even has it's own wikipedia entry.

But, what about the stage before connecting...

Gathering.  

If we don't have enough dots, they won't ever connect into anything interesting or different.

In Anna Rascouet-Paz's creative mornings talk, she argues that it takes curiosity to collect the dots.  

As a general rule, I'd say I'm pretty curious.  I've travelled around the world, love to read and was even on a child-leash as a kid because I ran away so much (maybe a precursor to my adult life).  

Regardless, I can still get into a thinking rut.  Here's some of her tips on staying curious.

1. Aim for breadth over depth
Where did the Renaissance man go?  How about the polymaths?  For some reason, we've started honoring the specialist -- the person with focused knowledge.  While that may be good for your dentist, it doesn't really produce creative thinkers.  As Roman Krznaric suggests, maybe we should start seeking after breadth of knowledge vs depth.

"The bag's not for what I take, Colson -- it's for what I find along the way."  
- Macgyver
2. Curiosity is like a muscle.  It needs to be exercised
It's not enough to be curious every once in awhile or on one particular topic.  You need to apply it as a way of life -- why?  what?  how? should be the foundations of your vocabulary.  

One tip that I like is to "take a different path home" from work.  Our minds tend to "chunk" things together to speed up our processing power; therefore, we often miss the things our brains have become accustomed to seeing everyday.  A new route means that you notice new things, like the man that works in the corner store or the flowers that bloom in your neighbor's windowsill.

3. It's okay to change your mind
I've been told that I've "changed so much since college," usually with a hint of criticism.  

As my favorite philosopher says:
"Anyone who isn't embarrassed of who they were last year probably isn't learning enough."  
- Alain de Botton
4. Get out of your bubble
We tend to befriend people similar to us.  In fact, one of the greatest predictors of who you will marry or become friends with is proximity (see this study from the University of Leipzig).  If you work at the same place, live in the same neighborhood or sit next to each other at school, you likely have a lot of base commonalities and routine interactions, even if your interests or senses of humor may be different.

Likewise, social psychology proves that we are strongly attracted to look-a-likes.  According to Byrne's "Law of Attraction," attraction towards a person is positively related to the proportion of similar traits associated with that person.  On the other hand, cognitive dissonance is the discomfort experienced when holding two conflicting beliefs, which makes it difficult for people to befriend others that have very different attitudes and beliefs.

What does this mean?
The people you follow on twitter and interact with on Facebook are probably pretty similar to you.  Find people that challenge you.  That will debate with you.  That can broaden your world view.

5. Travel
It's the easiest way to see the world through fresh eyes.
“Journeys are the midwives of thought. Few places are more conducive to internal conversations than a moving plane, ship or train. There is an almost quaint correlation between what is in front of our eyes and the thoughts we are able to have in our heads: large thoughts at times requiring large views, new thoughts new places. Introspective reflections which are liable to stall are helped along by the flow of the landscape. The mind may be reluctant to think properly when thinking is all it is supposed to do." 
- Alain de Botton, The Art of Travel

Do you believe in "flow"?

By me :)
























"Life is a series of natural and spontaneous changes.  Don't resist them; that only creates more sorrow.  Let reality be reality.  Let things flow naturally forward in whatever way they like." - Lao Tzu

A few weeks ago, I was in an "experimental videography" class and casually chatted with the students around me.

One middle-aged Singaporean, Michael, introduced himself as an actor -- an actor in 150 movies, TV shows and commercials to be exact.  I immediately started questioning why I signed up the class in the first place.  My last acting debut and finale were one in the same --  a 7th grade play where I forgot my lines and stood like a deer in spotlights for what seemed like an eternity.

I probed a bit further, and I found out Michael had been acting for less than 3 years.  He was an information security engineer (just as sexy as "an actor," right?).  One day, someone contacted him on Facebook and asked him to play an extra in a short film.  He said yes and loved it -- he felt a natural "flow" towards acting and decided to follow it.

He now acts full time and is unbelievably happy.  He also home brews his own wine (I just added that fact in because I think it's cool).

When we come to point of conflict or resistance in life, it might be because we are going in the wrong direction.  Rather than putting down your head and charging harder, maybe it's to reevaluate and jump paths.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Vanitas Art (i.e, paintings with skulls)

David Bailly, 1651

























Have you ever gone to a fine art museum and wondered, "What's with all those skulls?"

Did people decorate their houses with skulls?
Was it a weird funeral tradition in the 1600s?
Was it the beginning of the "goth" movement before Nine Inch Nails hit the scene?

Maybe you're more sophisticated than me or have a degree in art history, but I just figured it out last night. 

This skull art is called "Vanitas" and gets pretty deep...

Thursday, August 29, 2013

On Love & Marriage

Source: Photopin





























For better or worse, I often feel like an alien in my day-to-day life.  Rather than seeing things like someone that's been on this earth for nearly 30 years, I'm usually questioning what goes on around me.  

Why do people act like that?  Why do I think this?  (cue eyes looking directly at my navel). 

Call it curiosity.  Call it maladaptive.  Either way, it means I have a lot of thoughts in my head.

One of these such topics is marriage.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Attentional Bias & Prayer

Source: Photo Pin






































At painting class today, I listened to *a lot of* Bob Dylan.

In his famous song, "With God on our Side," he reflects on juxtaposition of religion and wars.

The First World War, boys
It came and it went
The reason for fighting
I never did get
But I learned to accept it
Accept it with pride
For you don't count the dead
When God's on your side.

When the Second World War
Came to an end
We forgave the Germans
And then we were friends
Though they murdered six million
In the ovens they fried
The Germans now too
Have God on their side.  

I'm not writing tonight to debate religion.  

Instead, I'd like to describe "attention bias" (the father of "cognitive biases") through the example of a religious person.

When did "play" change?
























I have a bit of a pipe dream.  I want to be a toy maker.  professionally.


Why?
Well, I like things that are fun.  
I'm also pretty critical of the toys available in Toys R' Us (who decided to throw-up pink all over the girls' aisle?)

This being said -- I've got "toy making" on my to-do list (along with a million other things like correctly pronouncing items on a French menu, so everyone can say "wow, look at that sophisticated lady" or being able to name more than 5 African countries without going to Wikipedia).

We'll see when that happens.  In the meantime, I've been fascinated by articles on toys & play, like this one my college friend, Allison, shared with me, which I'll discuss now.

Monday, August 19, 2013

[New Video] Here is something false: You only live once


I've been thinking about this SMBC comic for the last few days, so I made the comic into a video (above) using CC photos from photopin, CC music from Jamendo and a few publicly available clips from YouTube.

Enjoy.

"What if Money Was No Object"


As previously mentioned, I'm taking an "Experimental Videography" class, so I decided today to play around with Camtasia + YouTube to better understand video tools.

Above, please find my first creation.  It mixes the audio from one of my favorite speeches by Alan Watts with the experimental video, MothLight, by Stan Brakhage.

Enjoy.

Making Any Noise You Can Imagine


"I haven't made this machine so I can emulate things that already exist.  I have made this so I can make any noise I can imagine."

I few weeks ago a random thought popped into my head: "Why haven't we created any new instruments in the last century?"

I post, therefore I am


I work in tech; therefore, my livelihood comes from people spending more and more time online.  Despite this, I've been known to question its impact on society -- whether it be Pinterest, Facebook or Smartphones.

In the video above, the creator makes the point that "Instead of building real friendships, we are obsessed with endless personal promotion"

Friday, August 16, 2013

Here is something false: You only live once
































































































































































































































































































































(Source: SMBC)

I LOVE the message in this comic.  It just resurfaced on my twitter feed.

The person you were at age 18 does not need to be the same person you are at 25.  You can continue to reinvent yourself -- to find new interests -- to change your mind.

This year, I've been really kicking my butt to try to find a creative outlet, learn new things & see what makes me happy.  I'm on the verge of turning 30, and I am not: A) convinced I've found "it" yet (i.e., a passion, a calling, a career, whatever it is I'm searching for), B) ready to settle for something I'm just "okay at" or "not totally bored by."

Therefore, I've been trying a lot of things.  

Monday, August 5, 2013

Book Review: The Pleasures & Sorrows of Work


I love Louis CK -- especially this bit above.  He makes a valiant point that we've lost a sense of wonder for the miraculous things (i.e., flying and cell phones) that have become common place in our modern day world.  

In a similar way, Alain de Botton explores some of the same mysteries in his book, The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work.

"We are now as imaginatively disconnected from the manufacture and distribution of our goods as we are practically in reach of them, a process of alienation which has stripped us of myriad of opportunities for wonder, gratitude and guilt."  - Alain de Botton  
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...