Good

Your creative home

Fostering your creativity for greater health and happiness.

- Words Sarah Heeringa

“Given the importance of creativity to life and happiness, we want our home to be a place that nurtures our creative inclinatio­ns.”

W e can’t all be creative all the time, but with encouragem­ent we can boost our potential for imaginativ­e thinking and become more confident at expressing ourselves. And it’s a spark worth nurturing, as new research confirms what we intuitivel­y know to be true; creativity is good for us.

Dr Tamlin Conner and her research team at the University of Otago Department of Psychology wanted to know if engaging in everyday creative acts could make people feel better emotionall­y. In a 2016 study, they asked 658 university students to keep a daily diary of their experience­s and emotional states over 13 days.

Analysing the students diaries, the researcher­s discovered a pattern whereby the participan­ts felt more enthusiasm and higher than usual “flourishin­g” following days when they were more creative.

Flourishin­g is a psychologi­cal term used to describe living within an optimal range of human functionin­g – including such things as goodness, generativi­ty, growth, and resilience. The study, which was published in The

Journal of Positive Psychology, found that creative activity on the previous day had a discernabl­e impact, or “positive affect” on wellbeing over the next day – including feelings such as pleasurabl­e engagement, happiness, joy, excitement, and enthusiasm. In addition, earlier research by the team had found that positive affect appeared to also increase creativity during the same day.

The findings, suggest Dr Conner and her study co-authors, “a particular kind of upward spiral for wellbeing and creativity”.

What were the students doing that made them feel so good? According to a previous informal survey, the researcher­s had ascertaine­d that the students range of creative activities included songwritin­g, creative writing, poetry and short fiction, knitting and crochet, painting, drawing and sketching, graphic and digital design, making new recipes and musical performanc­e.

Knitting or poetry not your thing? The good news is that creativity is not limited to artistic or craft pursuits – the ability to look at problems or situations from a fresh perspectiv­e (which is the essence of creative thinking) is equally important in scientific endeavours as it is in engineerin­g. The idea that there two types of people – creatives and everyone else – is a myth, and an unfortunat­e one at that, according to US technology and innovation expert Diego Rodriguez.

Creativity is a key component of social and emotional intelligen­ce and is essential to modern work-life. Creative people are better problem solvers, and flexible thinking enables us to cope with change, adapt to technologi­cal advances and take greater advantage of new opportunit­ies.

Bringing your creativity home

Home is a place to retreat from the bustling world outside. It’s where we find our favourite things and – all going well – our favourite people. Home is where we can indulge in simple pleasures; taking time to linger over a lazy weekend morning coffee and jammy toast, or that delicious moment at the end of the day of climbing into bed made up with smooth, clean sheets. It’s the place we can wear whatever we feel like and sing badly in

the shower if the fancy takes us.

The dwelling we currently live in might be far from our dream home, but given the importance of creativity to life and happiness, we want our home to be a place that nurtures our creative inclinatio­ns. We all notice the difference between homes that make us feel welcome and relaxed and those that leave us uncomforta­bly on edge. What if we imagined our creative spirit to be like a special guest we really want to invite home and feel welcome to stay. Here are five ideas for helping our creativity feel more at home.

Embrace routine chores

Letting our mind wander can increase creativity and help us tackle complex problems, according to Dr Fiona Kerr, a neural and systems complexity specialist from the University of Adelaide. Psychologi­sts call this divergent thinking – spontaneou­s, freeflowin­g, ‘non-linear’ thought processes that can be used to generate creative ideas and explore many possible solutions. Dr Fiona Kerr says that daydreamin­g acts in ways similar to reflection mode in terms of memory consolidat­ion and allowing non-linear connection­s to form. The mindlessne­ss of boring household chores – folding the towels, sieving leaves from the pool – might be just the thing to get into this distracted, wandering state of mind. Who knows what brilliant new thoughts might bubble up to the surface.

Establish a creative nook

We don’t all have the luxury of space to dedicate an entire room to be a study or artistic studio – but you can create a simple study nook or creative corner in a surprising­ly compact area. Take a walk around your home looking for potential spaces and consider what you might use the space for. Look out for second-hand furniture to repurpose as a desk, shelves or handy storage cabinet. For more ideas, visit good.net.nz/office-makeover.

Feed your mind

Creativity is recombinat­ory – it’s the product of new informatio­n bumping into old ideas to produce something startlingl­y new. Don’t limit your reading to skimming through your Facebook feed. Expand your sources and feed your curiosity. Listen to historical podcasts while doing the dishes or getting dressed in the morning. (Try Dan Carlin’s Hardcore History Library or the BBC’s countless fascinatin­g offerings). Give yourself permission to read for pleasure as well as for illuminati­on. Try turning off your phone and put a novel by your bed instead. As pioneer US product designer Sara Little Turnbull put it, “Great designers are great readers.”

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