Engaging your creative brain for success
- Lily Wood
- Jul 20, 2023
- 8 min read
If you have ever been lost in a story – where you can see in your mind the scene that the story creates. Where you can almost hear the voices of the characters in your head as you are reading them, you are actively engaging your creative brain. A lot of people write off the creative side of your brain in favor of the logical side of your brain but that’s simply because people try to pin down the logical side as something that they can understand. It is impossible to understand the creative side of your brain because the creative brain is abstract. When you engage in a creative project, both sides of your brain are being used. Let’s say you are painting a picture. The logical side instructs you on how to do it; it tells you how to judge the perspective, how to keep things in proportion, it tells you what brush techniques to use, it tells you how to fix mistakes. These are all skills that you cultivate from research, learning and practice. It functions off of remembering skills you have learned and how you can replicate that in any given situation. Creativity is the inspiration to do something different. It cannot be fully understood because it is subjective and cannot be replicated. Here's an example, something for you to try right now. I’m going to give you a scene and you are going to close your eyes and imagine you are there.
You are at a beach. You are with 3 people who you have never met but you can picture what they look like very clearly in your mind. What can you hear? What can you smell? Is it a hot day or a cold day? What are the people around you wearing? What are you wearing?
Do you see how many possibilities there are here? It would be impossible to give this exercise to 100 people, get them all to write detailed descriptions of what they saw in their minds and get any two descriptions that were the same. Of course, a lot of what you create is based off of memory. The beach is probably based off of a beach you have seen in a picture once. Perhaps one of the people bears a striking resemblance to a celebrity. Or some distant memory of the smell of suntan lotion and doughnuts comes to mind but your creative brain has deconstructed all of these things you’ve seen and experienced and put them together to create something unique to you.
It is the image you hold in your mind about what you want to create. It is the part of your brain that changes your perspective when you mess up and decides to take things in a different direction to try to fix it. Anyone can replicate something they have seen and learned how to do. Engaging your creative brain is how you are able to create something unique. It is how you can do something that makes you different from everyone else…and everyone has the ability to do this. Everyone. No one was born just blessed with super powers in creativity, creative people are just people who spend time allowing their creative brain to work. You are able to more effectively solve problems when you engage your creative brain because it is constantly seeking exploration. It is actively seeking new experiences and experimenting with concepts. The ability to learn, practice and can replicate a new skill takes a logical approach but in order to create something different, you need to use creativity. There are so many ways that using your creative brain can be incorporated into your daily life:
1. Reading fiction
2. Creative writing/journaling
3. Art
4. Cooking
5. Playing with kids
6. Socializing
7. Hiking/exploring
8. Trying new experiences
The purpose of engaging in creative activities is to harness the power of your creative mind. It needs to be constantly engaged and not distracted in order to function properly. A creative mind that has no creative outlet – if you are just consistently shutting your mind off by mindlessly watching content, this manifests as serious problems with attention and problem solving. The only way to prevent this from happening is to harness the power of creativity through engaging in consistent creative outlets.
How having creative outlets can improve your life
1. It helps you to understand and master your emotions
The creative side of your brain is responsible for your emotions. You can’t regulate emotions with logic because emotions are illogical. It’s not logical to feel insecure or jealous or unhappy about an external event. Think about it like this: when you have been in a really bad mood and something bad happens like your car breaks down, doesn’t it feel like the worst thing in the world has happened? You catastrophize the event because your logical brain is trying to find a reason why you are feeling bad. But you feel bad anyway so there is no real reason why you feel this way, you just think there is because it’s the most logical solution. Now let’s take that same situation – your car has broken down; if you are in a really good mood, don’t you find that it doesn’t really bother you that much and you are much better at fixing the problem? This shows you that your emotions are illogical and are not really caused by external events – they are the result of our creative brains trying to function logically because we don’t have an effective creative outlet – we have not learned to regulate and harness our creativity. Logic does not require emotion, so operating without emotion allows us to be able to carry out repetitive and learned tasks easily and effectively. But being human, we have emotions and when our creative brain tries to take over and function like our logical brain does, it causes us to feel out of control or reactive or emotionally unstable. So by having a creative outlet, we are able to differentiate between what is logical and what isn’t and allows us to be able to feel emotions but not be overwhelmed by them because they are trying to override our logical brain.
2. It changes your perspective
By focusing your creative mind; allowing it to explore and experience new things, you are teaching it to adapt and to create a perspective and image of yourself that is positive…why positive? Your brain is always trying to protect you. Your logical brain goes off of what you know in order to make calculated decisions about how safe it is to try something new. Your creative brain is always engaged with the possibility of wanting to try something new. If you allow your creative brain to have that outlet, it’s like saying “walkies” to a puppy. It revels in this new activity and it doesn’t even have to be something crazy and dangerous, it could be as simple as reading a new book. If you don’t give it that creative outlet, your creative mind tries to do the job of the logical brain and starts constructing all these reasons why you aren’t doing what you want to do, what is wrong with you, why you have problems…concepts that have no basis in reality but over time, it creates this perspective of yourself and the world around you that is negative because you aren’t engaging in new experiences. This can manifest as a generalised anxiety – that the world is dangerous or that you will never be good enough to do something so there is no point in trying. It can manifest as depressive episodes – that life is boring and pointless and that you are boring and pointless and the reason why no one is around you is because no one can stand you. This is again illogical, but because you have constructed this perspective for yourself, it’s the only thing that makes sense to you.
3. It makes you more empathetic
Being able to think outside of your own perspective takes a lot of observation and imagination, working consecutively to establish a sound conclusion. Because being freely creative allows you to put your logical brain to rest, you can approach situations objectively and without judgement or preconceived ideals which leaves room for other people's input. It allows you to see things from a different angle which helps you to be able to relate to people who see things that way.
4. It makes you better at adapting to new situations.
When faced with a problem, sometimes the logical solution is not necessarily the best solution. Sometimes being able to circumnavigate the situation so that you and others can see alternative options is crucial to finding the best course of action.
5. It boosts your confidence
People who embrace their creativity and allow it to come out in a multitude of ways are amoung the most confident of all...because they believe in what they do. When you allow your creativity room to grow, it is like a force unto it's own and you are able to express yourself free from the approval of others.
6. It gives you a sense of authenticity
No two artists are the same. No matter what medium, when you are creating something, it comes from your perspective...you put a part of yourself into what you do. Therefore, anything you do creatively exhibits a part of you...the real you.
7. It is key to progression
As we have seen in the previous points, creativity changes your perspective, makes you empathetic, makes you better at adapting to new situations and boosts your confidence. These are all vital tools when it comes to advancing yourself, whether that be in your career, your relationship or even within yourself.
8. It can alleviate symptoms of mental illness
As we have explored in my points about emotions and perspectives, your creative mind is always looking for ways to find solutions to things that it can’t understand or has no experience of. I’m not suggesting that a lack of creative outlet causes mental illness – there are many complex reasons why people suffer mental health problems and just because someone experiences depressive episodes and feels anxious from time to time, that doesn’t mean they have a mental illness. Many creative people suffer from quite severe mental health issues. For them, their creative outlet is what makes their dark times more manageable. I’ve heard many times that people who are creative geniuses all seem to have mental health problems…I don’t believe that this is entirely true. I believe that the reason why the people we see as great creative minds happen to have mental illness is because these people have seen how transformational and beneficial a creative outlet is to their mental health, that they have thrown themselves into creativity and given it everything they’ve got. Overtime, that effort and that belief and that passion was recognized and just happened to make them a legend. Imagine if you had the gumption to do that. To throw yourself into your creative outlet like your life depended on it – because for some, their life really does depend on it – just imagine the possibilities.
Having experienced mental illness myself, I know how hard it is to stay on track with this. There are days when I have felt like depression has killed my creative brain and my mind is blank. There are also days when I feel so hyper that ideas are just shooting out of my head like firecrackers and I start several projects at once to just cast them aside when my perspective shifts again. But this is where our logical brain comes in. This is what our logical brain is needed for. By learning why we have creative burn out during bouts of depression and methodically continuing to do the things that spark that creative brain; reading, writing drawing, playing, exploring…we can keep that momentum going so that we can continue to harness that power of creation. And when we feel like we have a million ideas all bubbling up and over spilling – taking the logical steps to continue with what we are doing but also to get that energy out and focus it on the project we are working on so that we can finish it. It takes time, practice and patience. But your brain is beautiful. It is weird and dark and mysterious, sometimes dirty and sometimes it’s a little broken. But one thing is for sure, there is not one that is exactly like yours. Letting your creativity bloom, is how you can prove that and trusting your logical brain to keep you on track is how you will make it something monumental.




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