The world is an educational institute and EVERYONE living, irrespective of age, race, or social status, is a student. Through this medium, I have the honour of sharing the lessons I'm learning in my evolution as a student in the Institute of Life. The pieces you read here are the products of my personal meditation and the contributions of other people that I have been blessed by. Have a nice time reading and please feel free to respond to them as you deem fit. Welcome to my World!
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Saturday, 6 September 2008
15 Steps To Cultivate Lifelong Learning
Tuesday, 19 August 2008
How To Boost Your Creative Output
Working productively can be broken down into several key skills: time management, organization and controlling your attention and energy. One of the often neglected but most important factors is your creative output. Successful people tend to have an unusually high creative output and I'd like to offer some tips for how you can boost yours.
What is Creativity?
Creativity is often compared with originality. When you see someone who can come up with unique ideas, you say they are "creative". Picasso was creative because of his unique painting style. J.R.R. Tolkien was creative for writing "The Lord of the Rings" while Linus Torvalds is considered creative for starting Linux.There is another way of viewing creativity. The root word of creativity is create. Creativity can be seen not just on how original your ideas are, but on how many of them you can produce. Creative output is a measure of your ability to churn out creations.Thomas Edison held over a thousand patents in his name. Leonardo da Vinci was an astronomer, painter, engineer, inventor, poet and writer. Although both had unique ideas, their creative output dwarfed most of their colleagues.
Why Does Creative Output Matter?
Isn't quality supposed to be more important than quantity? The problem is that with creative output, quality and quantity are completely independent. A few people have gotten the wrong idea about creative output, the myth that having a higher output will somehow reduce the quality of the ideas you create. Having a high quantity of ideas doesn't reduce the quality of ideas; quantity enhances quality. I write for several sites as well as my own. A couple of fellow bloggers disagreed with this strategy. Won't you be giving away your best ideas so other websites will profit from them, they asked? This assumes that each idea I create reduces the total ideas available to write about. But that's ridiculous.Ideas are not zero-sum. Having one idea doesn't reduce the amount of ideas you are able to produce. Boosting your creative output requires changing how you channel attention. It has nothing to do with depleting an imaginary idea-bank inside your brain.
How to Boost Your Output
The most important way you can boost your output is to get rid of the zero-sum assumption. If you feel that each idea created limits your ability to create new ideas, your output will be only a trickle. The best writers, programmers, designers and idea-generators I know believe that the supply of ideas is endless. You only need to know how to turn on the flow.Here are some tips to get you started:
Churn Without Judgment If you stress about the quality of work you are outputting, then the flow will be cut off. Writers block is a symptom of perfectionism. Churn first, judge later.
Idea Breeding Use past ideas to generate new ideas. I've written close to 500 articles in the past two years. If I ever get stuck, all I need to do is search through past articles. Almost always they leave unanswered questions that can be tackled with a new article.
Creative Input Feed your brain with books. I read about 50-70 books a year. The most creative people I know can read over a 100. By devouring knowledge you add to the variety of ideas you can produce.
Be Patient It can take a while for your brain to get into the right flow. I can write 1500 words in an hour when I'm in the right mental state. But that state often requires working through twenty minutes where I type no more than a sentence. Take the time to accelerate your creative flow.
Use Large Time Chunks Since it takes time to warm up your creative muscles, you can't expect to go fast if you are constantly stopping. Use large chunks of time where you can build up speed and work for a few hours before taking a break.
Publish Garbage If you are starting out in a new pursuit, you have only one goal: boost creative output. This often means publishing junk until you train yourself to do a better job. Feedback from the world (not self-judgement) is the fastest way to hone your creative flow.
Set a Quota Give yourself a certain output criteria for each day, week or month. This will build up a high creative output that can later be refined. Instead of just creating when you feel like it, set a target. Sometimes you'll produce garbage. But you'll also produce a lot more winners than by being a perfectionist.
Hit the Challenge Zone If you set too few standards for quality, you won't improve. But if you set too high standards, your creative output will plummet. The challenge zone is the area where you have enough challenge to improve yourself but not so much that you can't perform.
Aim With Your Challenge Zone There is a tendency to use external factors to define your standards. For example, you want to become a musician, so you decide to set your standards to one of your favorite bands. This is a mistake. By setting the challenge zone to external criteria you kill your creative output or kill your quality. You only need to compete with yourself; don't judge yourself by others' standards.
Nuke Those Assumptions If you assume that your creative output is fixed, it will be. Set yourself a high quota and aim within your challenge zone. You'll probably be surprised at how much more you can produce if you force yourself to. More importantly, you'll probably be surprised that quality doesn't usually suffer when you boost creative output.
Scott Young is a university student who writes about productivity, habits and self-improvement. http://www.scotthyoung.com/blog/
Tuesday, 29 July 2008
FORMULA FOR FAILURE AND SUCCESS
Sunday, 13 July 2008
EXTRACTS FROM AS A MAN THINKETH by James Allen
Sunday, 29 June 2008
SOME 22 FACTS ABOUT YOUR LIFE PURPOSE
- It is the key to your greatness
- It is not determined by your past or present location
- It has nothing to do with your family background or standing in the society
- It may have nothing to do with your present career or the job you are doing now
- It helps you to set your priorities in life and identify what is really important and what isn’t
- It helps you to apportion and make use of time more productively
- God will require an account of stewardship from you on what you do with it
- It takes an accountability system to continually live and fulfil it maximally
- It is what you will do with joy and look forward to doing everyday
- It will bring you great contentment in life and give you a sense of fulfilment
- It helps you to identify your destiny partners: e.g. who to marry, who to be friendly with, who to go into business with, who to hire as workers, who to submit to etc
- In the field of your purpose, you are a king and a celebrity
- It is in the Word of God
- It takes God and His resources to fulfil it
- You are not really successful if you are not fulfilling or living it
- It guides you to make the right choices and decisions in life
- It is not something you learn in school, seminars, workshops, or conferences
- It has been in/with you all along, merely awaiting discovery
- You might have been fulfilling it without knowing
- You don’t have to leave your present job or career to start fulfilling it
- You can make a career out of it
- It can be commercialised to fetch you money and make you very rich
Saturday, 19 April 2008
The Character of Success
- Having money, riches and wealth
- Having many properties and assets
- Being popular and in the news at all times
- Having fleet of cars
- Having many children
- Marrying many wives
- Having many admirers
- Being a public figure
- Being the envy of everyone around etc
- The fear of God
- Integrity
- Sound Ethical Values
- A Sense of Mission
- Compassion
- Character
Friday, 11 April 2008
THE WOMAN, THE ECONOMY & THE FAMILY
The woman has often been described as “a man with a womb.” She is the specie of mankind whom by virtue of her peculiar physiological features (e.g. the womb) keeps the human race going.
The Role of the Woman in the Economy
The woman is the unseen influence behind every successful man in the society. Therefore, as the mother, the wife, the sister, the daughter, or a relative of the men at the corridors of power, the woman is better positioned to influence certain economic policies that will turn out in the best interest of all.
The woman, by virtue of her natural intuitiveness, is more equipped to pursue certain courses that will enhance the economy than the man who is usually more logical in reasoning and action.
The woman performs the dual role of a driver as well as a support system in the economy.
As a driver – the woman facilitates the economic chain through her enterprise in business and in the workplace. The woman also functions as a support system towards the growth and development of the economy.
The Role of the Woman in the Family
The woman is the pulse of the family. She is the one that dictates the tone and direction of the home. As the manager of the home, the woman wields considerable influence in the ultimate productivity and performance of members of her household in the larger society.
The woman is also the moulder of the character and attitude of members of her household and these inform their level of adaptation into and contributions to the society for good or otherwise.