Sunday, May 2, 2010

The 6 Characteristics of Highly Creative People



Michelle L. Casto Thomas Moore said, 'We are all poets and artists as we live our daily lives, whether or not we recognise our role and whether or not we believe it.' Human beings share an innate need to create. Even you! There is a continuum of creativity, ranging from being slightly creative to highly creative. The good news is that you can learn to be more creative by observing creative people and modeling yourself after them. Artists, writers, and creative types seem to have similar characteristics. Some of the personality traits listed below may seem eccentric, odd, even 'out there' - but that is where creativity lies - in the outreaches of our consciousness, in the depths of our souls. If you had the opportunity to speak to Picasso or Jane Austen, you would probably find out that they are ordinary people, much like you and I. The difference is that they have allowed more of their soul to come out and play and have freed themselves of convention and restriction. Creativity is essentially the art of discovery and an act of faith. When you create something--- a work of art, book, software program, dance routine, or role for a play, you discover parts of yourself that you never knew existed. Creative people have a strong need to express more of who you really are and often have to fight for that right. The character Isabelle in the movie, Fire and Ice, has a great outlook on what it means to be creative, she says, 'To create, sometimes you must rebel.'

1 - Unconventional

Creative people do not feel the need to conform to society's standards. They often swim against the current and flow with their own way of thinking and living. They have original ideas that literally turn the world upside down and right-side out. Take for example, Galileo who proved that the earth revolved around the sun (instead of the other way around), which was revolutionary in his time.

2 - Individualistic

Creative people want to find out what the truth is, and they have a strong need to decide for themselves what works and what does not. Often they are ahead of their time, and much of their work is appreciated/acknowledged after they are dead and gone. Many writers are famous for marching to the tune of their own drum, such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, who wrote the book, Self-Reliance, and Robert Frost who penned, 'two roads diverged in a wood, and I took the one less-travelled.'

3 - Inventive

Creative people live in the world of ideas, and don't always have the best interpersonal skills. Because they are so highly intelligent, and live in the realm of possibility, they are constantly coming up with bright ideas. They also take notice of what is missing in the world and/or what could be improved. Take for instance, Thomas Edison, who invented hundreds of things in his time, his most famous invention being the light bulb. He saw that there was darkness and created light.

4 - Driven

Creative people cannot 'not do something'-they are almost compulsive until they can bring their internal vision into fruition. They have that 'fire in their belly'---a passion to contribute to the beauty and betterment of the world. Because of their high drive, they can produce a lot in a relative short amount of time. Michelangelo created an amazing amount of work, as a painter, sculptor, and inventor. One of his best known works is the immense ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.

5 - Visionary

Creative people have a guiding vision in their head, heart, and soul that they are often called to bring to life. Who else but Michelangelo could look at a large piece of marble and 'chip away at everything that wasn't David?' According to him, 'I saw an angel in the marble and carved until I set him free.'One of his best-known works is the immense ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, which took him three years to complete, where he often had to work upside down for hours at a time. If you ever have seen any of his work, you can easily see that it is a vision to behold.

6 - Intuitive

Creative people are very in touch with their inner selves. They pay attention to the signs, synchronicities, symbols around them, and make use of that information in their work. They often act as a channel, where ideas and inspiration come from a higher plane. They allow the work to guide them to where it needs to go. The work clearly originates in their soul, not from their ego. Talk about ideas coming from out of the blue, remember how Isaac Newton 'discovered' gravity? He was sitting under a tree and an apple fell on his head!

As you read this, do you find yourself relating to some of these traits? If so, it is time to start creating. Getting started can often be the hardest part, because we often limit our creativity by listening too closely to our negative inner voice. But so did all of these examples of creators. Even the famous painter Vincent Van Gogh struggled with that, but he created a remedy for that, he said, 'If you hear a voice within you saying, you are not a painter, then by all means, paint, and that voice will be silenced.' Robert Henri says, 'When the artist is alive in any person, whatever his kind of work may be, he becomes an inventive, searching, daring, self-expressing creature.' Once you have created, you now have to put yourself out there for all to see. This is where your faith comes in to support you. Remember that if you are creating from your soul, it will not matter whether other people accept your work or not. You are simply doing what you are called to do as a human being, create.

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