Changing your perspective
Watch these two videos
Look at these photographs
“Instead of complaining that the rose bush is full of thorns, be happy the thorn bush has roses.” ~Proverb
We have a choice in how we view things. Consider these thinking techniques:
Think like someone else
One way to look at your challenge differently is by imagining how someone else might try to solve your problem. For maximum effect, pick someone (in)famous. What would Dr. Crowley do in your situation? What about Oprah, Tom Brady or Drake? Your famous associate doesn’t even have to be real. Imagining how James Bond, Harry Potter or Luke Skywalker might attempt to solve your problem can be just as insightful.
One way to look at your challenge differently is by imagining how someone else might try to solve your problem. For maximum effect, pick someone (in)famous. What would Dr. Crowley do in your situation? What about Oprah, Tom Brady or Drake? Your famous associate doesn’t even have to be real. Imagining how James Bond, Harry Potter or Luke Skywalker might attempt to solve your problem can be just as insightful.
The Time Traveler
Imagine for a moment that time travel will be invented at some point in the future. Hold that thought.
Imagine for a moment that time travel will be invented at some point in the future. Hold that thought.
Imagining how your experienced 90-year-old self would give you advice, helps to create psychological distance. The exercise allows you to shift your perspective and to see approaches you would otherwise overlook.
Make it worse
Another great way to change your view on a problem is by imagining ways to worsen the situation. This might seem ridiculous, but if there’s anything reading this article might have taught you, it is that there can be a lot of value in ridiculousness. Thinking about ways to make your situation even more horrible than it already leads to surprising insights.
Another great way to change your view on a problem is by imagining ways to worsen the situation. This might seem ridiculous, but if there’s anything reading this article might have taught you, it is that there can be a lot of value in ridiculousness. Thinking about ways to make your situation even more horrible than it already leads to surprising insights.
The ‘Make it worse’ technique consists of three very simple steps:
Step 1. How could you make your situation even worse?
Step 2. What could be possible benefits of this aggravation?
Step 3. Use new insights to generate as many ideas as possible for tackling the initial problem.
The Reversal
To change your perspective, it sometimes is enough to just need to change your question. After all, the way you describe your problem determines what direction you will look for solutions. Actively change your problem statement and you’ll force yourself to generate more original solutions.
To change your perspective, it sometimes is enough to just need to change your question. After all, the way you describe your problem determines what direction you will look for solutions. Actively change your problem statement and you’ll force yourself to generate more original solutions.
One way of doing this is changing the order of the keywords in your problem statement. For instance, don’t ask ‘How do we make sure that fewer people take the car to their work?’, but ‘How do we make sure that fewer cars take people to their work?’ While such a ‘reversed’ challenge sometimes sounds odd and illogical, it often sparks much more creative solutions. In this case, it might lead you from pondering about different means of transportation (like trains or bikes) to considering ways to get people to carpool (fewer cars for the same number of people).
Assignment for Monday
Look at something differently this weekend.
Take a picture of something.
Describe it.
Now, describe it differently.
Then a 1-page puke about your process of figuring out how to think differently.
What did you do?
What made you do it?
What surprised you?
What made you do it?
What surprised you?



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