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Harnessing Your Creativity                                     179



                              A WORLD OF POSSIBILITY


                                   You learned, on page 46, about the idea of “learned optimism” as
                                   developed by Martin Seligman. I would like to take this concept
                                   one stage further and suggest that, to be truly smart, you need to
                                   understand  the  world  of  “learned  possibility.”  Seligman’s  learned
                                   optimism concept is based on the way you interpret events as they
                                   happen to you. Mine is about a view of the future that is separated
                                   from  the  restrictions  of  optimism  or  pessimism.  It  is  not  about
                                   being  half  full  or  half  empty,  but  about  the  possibility  that  you
                                   might be filled to the brim, that anything can be done.
                                         It is a kind of mental modeling that I am convinced brings
                                   huge benefits.
                                         Mike Leibling, director of Trainset, puts it like this: “If you have
                                   one idea, it’s a compulsion. If you have two ideas, it’s a dilemma. But
                                   if you have three or more ideas, then you have a choice.”
                                         Here are just a few practical suggestions as to how you can
                                   move into the world of possibility:


                                   Give yourself one goal only each day.
                                   Make time for at least one period of at least 20 minutes of total
                                   relaxation each day.
                                   Always look at problems from at least three points of view.
                                   Make a note every day of what surprises you.
                                   Try to surprise someone you work with every day.
                                   As well as writing them down, always visualize problems.
                                   Use all your senses.
                                   Use music somehow every day of your life.
                                   Make sure you become absorbed for an hour or more in at least one
                                   task every day.
                                   If  you  use  brainstorming,  focus  on  what  you  do  in  the  last  five
                                   minutes.
                                   Hold some meetings standing up.
                                   Send fewer group emails.
                                   Make a point of speaking in person to at least one person you were
                                   planning to email every day.
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