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Articles: You

How Much Noise Is In Your Life?

In sound recording there is something known as the “noise floor”. This is the amount of constant ambient noise in the recording environment or that results as a function of the method of recording.

The goal for any recording  engineer is to maximize the amount of signal recorded in comparison to the amount of noise. The more noise is present, the more difficult it is to discern the signal, or the subject of the recording.

I’ve noticed this same principle playing out in my life as it relates to the kinds of stimuli I allow to take root in my mind. The more “ambient noise” that’s allowed in my environment, as defined by potential distractions or by less-than-purposeful stimuli, the more difficult it is to sort through it all and discern that which will be useful in my life and work.

I’ve had to develop the purposeful practice of sorting through stimuli and putting it into a “stimulus queue” in order to ensure that I’m not haphazardly absorbing stimuli without thinking through how it will benefit my creative process. I’m always trying to ensure that the stimulus in my life is high quality.

What are the characteristics that mark higher quality stimuli?

1. Relevant. When we are creating we are combining bits of stimulus into something new. The more relevant the stimuli the more likely we are to have a conceptual breakthrough. This doesn’t mean that we should be looking for stimuli that resolve the particular problem we are facing, but it does mean that we should be purposeful to limit our stimuli during certain seasons to elements that are more likely to focus our thought toward desired ends.

2. Diverse. While carrots are healthy for me, if I eat nothing but carrots for a month I will probably find my body in serious disrepair. Similarly, we must diversify our diet of stimuli by exploring divergent topics of interest, varying forms of media and by ingesting the opinions of others we may be inclined to disagree with. This will expand our capacity to process information, help us form new and interesting patterns and stimulate different parts of our brain than will be triggered by staying in the same stimulus rut.

3. Challenging. We need to ingest stimuli that cause us to think and that challenge us to grow our skills. While consuming pop culture can be helpful is staying abreast of trends and keeping us squarely in the flow of cultural relevance, we also need to ensure that we are communing with the great minds and experiencing mind-stretching concepts and stories.

Develop practices around the stimuli in your life. It will help you better prepare for the work you face day to day and will increase your capacity for insight and brilliance when you need it.

Prolific, Brilliant and Healthy

Every time I speak to a group of creatives or sit with anyone one-on-one, I challenge them that their end goal should be to be brilliant, prolific and healthy:

Prolific + Brilliant + Healthy = producing great work consistently and in a sustainable way.

Many (MANY!) people don’t care about the “healthy” part. They just want to crank out as much great work as they can, make a ton of money, and deal with the consequences later. If that’s you, that’s fine. That seems to me like an incredibly unsatisfying way to live, but that’s your choice.

(I want to be able to sustain my work over the long-term. As I listen to the wise advice of a lot of successful people, a consistent theme is that the race belongs to the persistent, not to the ones who are quick out of the gate. I want continue to get better and be more prolific and produce better work over time, not to burn out on the altar of short-term productivity. But that’s just me.)

Most people perform well in two of these areas, but not in all three:

Prolific + Brilliant – Healthy = producing great work consistently, but our life is a stressful mess.

Brilliant + Healthy – Prolific = producing great work sustainably, but not enough of it to justify keeping our job.

Healthy + Prolific – Brilliant = producing work consistently and sustainably, but it’s crap.

This is just a quick challenge to do a gut check about where you stand with this. What do you really want out of your life and your creating, and are you building your life in such a way as to get it?

Be Reasonable

“Be reasonable.”

Those words are constantly being spoken to us in various ways.

Don’t take risks.

Better not to take a chance on that project.

Hug the shoreline.

Time to face reality.

Accept what is and stop thinking about what could be.

Pragmatics are more important than possibilities.

If it could be done, someone would have already done it.

Reasonable people don’t change the world.

Did you ever stop to think that people tell you to be reasonable so that they don’t have to face their own fear of failure?

photo credit: Eneas

7 Word Bio

I’ve been trying to find a way to allow AC community members to introduce themselves to one-another without the typical, “Hi, I’m Bob, I live in Manhattan, I like puppies and rural lightning strikes…”, etc. I came up with the idea of the “7 Word Bio.” (I realize that this may not be entirely original, I don’t know.) Anyway, I’d encourage all of us to engage in this. I think this is a good exercise on a few fronts:

1. It helps us all gain clarity to what we’re REALLY trying to do rather than just giving the factual scoop.
2. It helps us communicate to others what we’re passionate about (process) rather than just fixating on the end result (product).

So, here’s my 7 Word Bio:
“An arms dealer for the creative revolution.”

What is yours? (Rough drafts are fine…)

Photo credit: Lightlady

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