Thursday, October 10, 2024

Chemical Reactions

Continuing with the effects of resources upon things, consider the manner in which a book, film or an experience can serve to fuel creative thinking, like a chemical reaction that accelerates or enhances the mind. This sort of catalyst has no definite outcome; it rushes at us without expectation, but when it hits, our creative process feels a flash of insight, inspiration and excitement at the possibilities with which the idea fills us.

But though we want catalysts to occur on a regular basis, we don't know when they will, or even IF they will. There’s no method, no sign, no clear way to predict when a moment of insight will, or won't, come. No matter how much we’ve read, learned and experienced, we can never tell if an outcome will come, or what that outcome will be. From our perspective, it seems to just happen—it appears out of nowhere, with no pattern to follow. This is what makes it puzzling, because even with all the knowledge and tools at our disposal, we can’t predict it or force it.

This is a substantive characteristic of creativity that forces would-be painters, musicians, film-makers and writers into becoming shop clerks, insurance salespeople, resource managers and electricians. Creativity is, and will always be, something that is beyond our control; it depends upon inspiration, which is a miserable, taciturn, rotten little zeitgeist that has a tendency to stay as a guest too long when our relatives are visiting from Schenectady and is never around when we've taken two weeks off for a holiday.

Continued on the Higher Path

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