Photo: ullstein bild via Getty Images Last week, I had an idea. It wasn’t even a very good one , but it felt incredible, not least because I haven’t had a single new idea since March. My productivity has never been more perfunctory: Sure, I finished the project I started pre-pandemic, and yes, I’ve managed to maintain a regular output of stories here at my job. But I have not felt inspired, or creative. I’ve just been trying to get by.
For Zomorodi , inspiration can be found in small chunks of scheduled boredom. At the beginning of quarantine, spending her mornings boiling water, Zomorodi noticed that by standing at the stove and observing the water rather than hurrying around the house, tending to her kids and her emails, she was able to access that zoned-out sort of boredom that lends itself to spontaneous creativity, even if only for a few minutes at a time. Later, she upgraded to hour-long walks.
While misery and fear can breed creativity and invention, Sellier says that’s context dependent. People working on COVID-19 vaccines are likely extremely motivated by the current context, she says, but the same can’t necessarily be said for, say, novelists, or artists, or anyone who might question their career’s utility at this particular moment in history.
KTHeaney 'Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.' ---Albert Einstein
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