The Principle of Creativity
In colloquial terms, we use the word creativity to mean that someone has the gift of artistry. It describes the ability to think up new or unusual ways of doing things – decorating a home, painting a picture, solving a problem, etc. The spiritual definition differs slightly. If you have Creativity in your garment, you actually think differently and see the world through a unique lens. You don’t just juxtapose old ideas or objects in a new way – you develop NEW ideas and objects.
If you want to allow Creativity to live through you, you must develop the habit of emptying your mind. My friend, poet Betty Luceigh describes Creativity not as a quality, but as a realm:
To enter the Creative Realm,
you must leave behind everything
Otherwise, when you exit, you will have nothing.
This idea corresponds to my never-ending warning against programming your dreams. Many dream teachers ask their students to actually set an intention before going to sleep, so that they will dream the solution to a problem, for example. I suggest that if you try to program the dream, you limit the possibilities of the dream realm. Dreaming is itself an act of Creativity, if and only if you enter the dream realms fully prepared to receive without expectation of what you may experience.
So it is with Creativity. New ideas and forms don’t come from rearranging old ones. They spring spontaneously from an artesian well of possibility. With Creativity in your garment you have learned to place your mind in the flow of that well and allow new ideas to take seed therein.
Creativity, in other words, requires a touch of insanity. One cannot clutch to old ideas and be creative. One cannot demand to be in control and be creative. One cannot be fearful of change and be creative. Creativity requires mental freedom in order to merge with the not-yet – the formlessness of potential.
Let’s look at three people who hold Creativity as the primary thread in their invisible garments: The Dalai Lama, Walt Disney, and Werner Erhard.
His Holiness, the Dalai Lama, certainly lives the principle of Creativity. I love to listen to him speak, especially when he is being interviewed, because his spontaneity and simplicity speak louder than his words. He never fails to amaze me with his answers to difficult questions. He knows how to purify any complexity down to its most essential components. Because of the time he spends in meditation, which requires empty mind, that flow of formless potential runs through his consciousness without being dammed. One senses when listening to him speak, that he has no fear, no need to control, no tension in his heart. Creativity pours through his every sentence.
Walt Disney, of course, mastered Creativity. Disney is quoted to have said, “It takes courage to accomplish anything.” He truly feared nothing. He pioneered every category of the entertainment industry that he entered: animation, multiple layered camera techniques, techni-color, theme parks. Interestingly, late in his life he stated that the thing he wanted to be remembered for was founding the California Institute of the Arts, an unparalleled college-level program for artists of all media, with a completely innovative approach to artistic training. Possibly more than any contemporary artist, Disney had the ability to flow into the future (the not-yet) and come back to the present with ideas and forms that would carry humanity toward a world of hope, imagination, peace, and lovable mice!
Werner Erhard was a “mouse of a different color.” His personal journeys and self-investigations gave birth to EST, a process which resulted in individual and organizational transformation for thousands of clients. This innovation in thinking helped shape an era of world-wide social and cultural change in the 1970’s. He is quoted to have said that through EST (Erhard System Training), personal transformation creates a clear distinction between changing an existing model and creating an entirely new model. Creativity certainly got its chance to live in our culture through its emissary, Werner Erhard.
What a perfect definition of Creativity: an activity which creates an entirely new model.
While very few of us will allow Creativity to express itself through us as clearly as The Dalai Lama, Walt Disney, and Werner Erhard, anyone who has Creativity in his or her garment carries a unique opportunity to create an entirely new model. I often borrow Brian Swimme’s phrase: we are living in a crisis of imagination. Virtually all the “problems” our world faces stem from our own errors and our lack of imagination. We humans fit ourselves much too easily and infinitely too willingly into old boxes. Creativity needs to be unleashed in our cultures. New forms, new concepts, new paradigms need to be unveiled.
If you have Creativity in your contract, take a deep look at your own patterns.
Your gift to the planet is more important than you can imagine. Unleash yourself! Let the Creativity take you to new heights.
If you do not have it in your life, find people who do wear Creativity in their garments. One of our most important “jobs” in this world is to support people in living authentically. Find ways to strengthen the birth of our new dream by supporting Creativity in your community.
Let me close with a story.
Steve Chen and Chad Hurley had taken their digital film camera to a dinner party. They made a short film and wanted to share it with the guests. They became frustrated, because they felt that they SHOULD be able to share it via the Internet. No matter what they tried, they found the process too complicated. Eventually they stopped trying to make the existing technology do what they wanted, and instead invented a software that would allow them to send the video to their friends.
Every guest at the party loved the idea of sharing home videos via the Internet. At first it was just this small group who shared. Then they began telling their friends, and like wildfire, the idea spread. The technology had to expand to meet the demand for video space.
Chan and Hurley officially launched YouTube just a few months later, in December 2005. By June 2006 (six months later) the site had become so popular that about 60,000 videos were uploaded daily. Fifty million videos are posted on the site at any given time, Chen says.
They tried to use what already existed. It didn’t work. Creativity awakened in them and they not only developed a new idea and a new form, but it became one of the most popular trends in recent history. Some of the videos uploaded are, of course, embarrassing and silly. Some are nothing more than visual blogs (although many of those are brilliant.) But most are beautiful artistic sharing’s. YouTube became a completely new venue for film artists who have no other outlet.
That’s what I’m talkin’ about! Creativity, when allowed to speak, brings unexpected, delightful results.