Crisis and Creativity
So, I’ve noticed there is a connection in my life between crisis – of health, of emotion or intellect, – and my creative output.
This weekend, for instance, I had a dangerous allergic reaction to a new medication that, ironically, was meant to tone down the allergic reactions I’ve been having. The day I had the anaphalaxis, I was wiped out and tired. But the next day, I found a creative solution to the problems we’ve been having looking for a house. And the day after that, I wrote three new poems – after weeks of not much writing, they came to me easily. It reminded me about how I felt after I was hospitalized for pneumonia in California – despite being wiped out physically for months afterwards, creatively I became driven, focused, and energized.
This – along with a feature article someone sent me about the Fukushima area 1 year later and the cleanup effort brought to mind our whole world’s differing responses to crisis. How we survive by figuring out new ways to live. How Japan mobilized a ton of people to protest nuclear power and its government and company’s responses to the disaster, how Japan’s disaster may change the direction of not only Japan, but America’s commitment to safer energy sources.
There are several ways to respond to a threat – you can panic, which, as we know from Douglas Adams, is never the answer (and bring a clean towel,) you can give up, or you can figure out a way to adapt and respond in a way that will help you deal with the next problem you encounter. It also reminded me of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Katniss in the Hunger Games – when confronted with a new monster, or a new trap, every time, they had to continually improve.
Or maybe this is all the ramblings of a madwoman. Anyway, a couple of new poems, there’s some sunshine outside, and I may have found a permanent place to live for us in this cloudy mountain wetland (well, in six months or so, after it’s finished…)
drew
This resonates with me. I often have post-illness bursts of creativity in which my writing shines. I chalk it up to a mysterious (and wonderful!) after-fever, a state in which the body is purging.I’m not quite sick but not quite me.
Or maybe it’s just reward for hangin’ on. : )
Laura E. Davis
Interesting connection you have with crisis and creative bursts. I think this is true for me, but only have a long period of upset. It’s just a matter of being patient long enough. Hard to remember, but I’m in one now after a cross-country move, so hears to bursting seams somewhere down the line 🙂
Famous Women in Business
To be creative requires divergent thinking (generating many unique ideas) and then convergent thinking (combining those ideas into the best result).