On Dullness and Doodles

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Maybe the answer to all our problems is a good doodle?

One of the great challenges of modern living is the paradox that life can be at the same time chaotic and dull. Amidst our many fears and strivings, life can get strangely tedious.

In part, this is because we have found solutions for much of the turbulence of our forebears. We don’t have to chop wood to heat or plant or hunt to generate our good. Many of the smooth paths that have come with our modern world lead us right into ruts.

Neuroscientists tell us that 95% of our thoughts today are the same as they were yesteday. It’s not surprising that our lives, behaviors, and thoughts can easily become dull.

One of the great disruptors of dullness is creativity.

There were a number of years where my daughter, Ana, was taking Suzuki violin lessons. During the early years, a parent to sits in on the lessons and observes so help can be offered when it’s time to practice at home.

Every Thursday afternoon I’d pick up Ana from school, we’d stop at a coffee shop for a treat, and then head to the lesson with a violin and some guilt (“I didn’t practice enough!”). It was a lovely time together, AND after listening to “Long, Long Ago” for the 75th time it could get really tedious.

Into the midst of those long, long lessons, I started doodling. I’d turn off my mind, turn on my pen, and weird and wacky designs would emerge. Over the months I developed quite an array of doodles. Looking back, that time with Ana, and the file of doodles that came from it, are a treasured memory for me.

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Creativity is a divine force that humanizes us.

It brings sparkle into our lives. It can take the form of an artistic expression, an out-of-the-ordinary behavior, or thinking in an entirely different way. And the creative impulse is always with us, happy to be called upon at any time or place.

Here’s the challenge: this creative force stays locked-up when we are in a rut. This is because our habitual self and our creative self are on a teeter-totter – when one’s up the other’s down.

Making space for creativity in our lives requires intention, a mindset shift, a change of heart.

  • Walking to your car? Pick up a leaf and examine it.

  • Listening to the news? Notice your typical thought reaction and turn it upside down.

  • Feeling lonely or afraid? Move beneath the static and fall in love with the picture that has hung on your wall for years.

One of the great possibilities of modern living is that life can get radically new in the blink of a creative eye. Your homework today is to transform one of your everyday habits or ruts. Let your creativity paint it, poke it, play with it, and then notice the adventure that is blooming, within and around you.