Something You Should Know - The Unexpected Value of Regret & The Evolution of Creative Thought
Episode Date: November 25, 2024Most refrigerators come with a light inside. It goes on when you open the door. It’s very helpful. So why doesn’t the freezer have a light too? This episode begins with the interesting explanation.... https://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2012/07/why-is-there-a-light-in-the-refrigerator-and-not-the-freezer/ Have you ever heard someone say they have no regrets? They’re lying. We all have regrets and the pain they cause is all too real. However, the pain of regret can be extremely helpful in making course correction as you move forward. If you have some lingering regrets, listen to my guest - bestselling author Daniel Pink. He has explored the world of regret, and he joins me to explain the different kinds of regrets we all feel and what those regrets are telling you. Daniel is author of the book The Power of Regret: How Looking Backward Moves Us Forward (https://amzn.to/33HJhfY). When someone comes up with an amazingly brilliant idea, chances are that person came up with a lot of little ideas first. That’s just one of the interesting insights you'll hear from my guest Anthony Fredricks, a nationally recognized educator and author of the book, From Fizzle to Sizzle: The Hidden Forces Crushing Your Creativity and How You Can Overcome Them (https://amzn.to/3u0AMY8). Listen as he explains how great ideas originate and how we are all a lot more creative than we probably think. On the topic of poultry (chicken or turkey), if you randomly ask people – “White meat or dark meat?” – most people prefer white meat. At least that is true in the U.S. Listen as I explain the reason why and reveal why you might want to give dark meat another try. http://www.slate.com/articles/life/food/2011/01/the_dark_side_of_the_bird.html Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on something you should know,
why does your refrigerator have a light inside,
but not your freezer?
Then we all have regrets, often painful regrets
and regrets can teach us a lot.
One of the biggest categories of regrets are these boldness regrets,
where people say, if only I'd taken the chance,
if only I'd asked that person out, if only I'd spoken up,
if only I'd taken that trip.
Over and over again, people regret playing it safe.
Also, when it comes to chicken, you probably like white meat best. Why is that?
And what makes some people creative and some people not? There have been studies. They concluded
that one factor clearly separated the two groups. The creative people thought they were creative,
and the less creative people didn't think they were.
All this today on Something You Should Know.
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Must be legal drinking age. Hi, welcome to what I think is a really interesting episode of Something You Should Know, because
I know what's in it.
But you listen and you be the judge. We start
today with your refrigerator and freezer. Chances are when you open the
refrigerator a light comes on so you can see what you're doing but open the
freezer and no light comes on. So why is there a light in the fridge and not the
freezer? According to a website called todayifoundout.com, it saves the manufacturer money to not have to put a light in the freezer.
And studies show that people don't open the freezer nearly as much as they open the fridge.
And certainly people don't browse in the freezer the way they browse in the fridge.
Generally people go to the freezer to get something out that's going to take some further preparation.
And the kitchen light is probably on anyway. people go to the freezer to get something out that's going to take some further preparation,
and the kitchen light is probably on anyway.
However, the refrigerator often gets raided at night, where a light is really handy while
you're looking around for something to eat.
There are other theories.
One is that it used to be impractical to have a light in the freezer in the old models that
built up frost on the inside.
The frost would have built up on the light too, making it pretty useless. Then when frost-free freezers came
along, they simply carried on the tradition. Whatever the reason, in most cases, most people
don't have a light in their freezer. And that is something you should know.
I'm sure you've heard people say that they have no regrets in their life.
Is that possible?
Is that even a realistic goal to live a regret-free life?
Regret is an emotion everyone feels, even those people who claim to have no regrets.
Bestselling author Daniel Pink has thoroughly explored the topic and emotion of regret and
found that your regrets can serve a valuable purpose in your life.
And he is about to explain regret and break regrets down in a way that you've likely
never heard before and will find fascinating.
His latest book is called The Power of Regret,
How Looking Backwards Moves Us Forward.
Hi, Daniel.
Welcome.
Thanks for coming on Something You Should Know.
Thanks for having me.
It's good to be with you.
So I am always skeptical when I hear someone say,
I have no regrets in life.
I think to myself, really?
Come on.
You've done nothing in your life that you
wish you had done differently or hadn't done at all
or taken another path or asked that person out
that you never did and always wish you had.
Doesn't everybody have regret?
Well, that's a great insight.
And the truth is that everybody does have regrets. It's part of the human condition. In fact, the only people without regrets are five year olds whose brains haven't developed people with certain kinds of brain damage and neurodegenerative disorders and sociopaths.
of our cognitive machinery. They exist for a reason and if we treat them right rather than ignoring them we can use them as a force for forward progress.
Right, well that seems to be the point, right? That you have you feel
regretful for something as a course correction. It's a way to course correct
because you you did something wrong or something went wrong and you regret that.
Absolutely right.
Regret is one of our most common emotions.
Everybody has it, as we were talking
about just a moment ago.
But it's also our most instructive and transformative
emotion.
And the problem is that if we say, I never look backward,
I don't have any regrets, we're not going to learn anything.
Now, at the same time, if we say, oh my god, I have regrets, I'm completely debilitated,
and you try to exonerate yourself from any responsibility to do anything,
that's also bad. What we need to do is we need to take a systematic approach to our regrets,
and none of us have really been taught to do that.
So what does that mean, a systematic approach to regret? I mean regret seems to come and there it is and there it is, but what's the systematic approach to handling it?
Yeah, well that's it. You got it exactly right. So what we need to do is we need to use regrets as a signal, as the universe telling us something. And if we think about our regrets, if we recognize that these feelings are for thinking, we can use them to, I mean, the evidence is overwhelming in
50 years of research, we can use them to make better decisions, we can use them to become
better negotiators, we can use them to become better problem solvers, better strategists,
find greater meaning in our lives. And, you know, in looking at this 50 years of science, I do think there is a
relatively simple three-step process that we can all enlist to use our regrets, not to hobble us
and not to, you know, for us to ignore them, but to actually enlist them to lead a better life.
And that three-step process briefly explained is...
It is. First of all, we gotta reframe the,
we gotta, number one, reframe your view of yourself
and our regrets.
A lot of times we beat up on ourselves
for making mistakes or having regrets.
Instead, what you should do is show yourself
what's called self-compassion,
which is to treat yourself with the same kindness
you would treat everybody else,
and to show and to realize that your regrets
are part of the human condition.
Step two, you want to disclose your regret. This is a huge thing.
When we disclosing our regrets relieves the burden, but even more than that,
when we take this amorphous negative feeling and convert it into words, those words are less fearsome.
We begin to make sense of it. So you
want to reframe it, you want to disclose it, and then you want to extract a lesson from it. And a
good way to do that is to take a step back. Think about how you're going to feel about this situation
in 10 years, or even better, ask yourself, what would you tell your best friend to do with this
regret? And so this systematic process of reframing it
through self-compassion, disclosing it,
because we know the benefits of disclosure and sense-making
are vast, and then also taking a step back
and extracting a lesson from it, gives us a way
to take this spear of negativity and turn it
into something positive
This I have a couple of thoughts about regret that I'd like to get you to comment on and and that is I
sort of distinguish and maybe you do or don't but
between regret
Over something that happened and regret that you got caught because of something that happened. Oh, interesting.
That's very interesting. Okay, so there are distinctions here. And I'll tell you how I got some insight into this is that I went out and collected about 16,000 regrets from people in
105 countries, this incredible trove of human longing and aspiration. And one
of the things that people regret, it turns out around the world, people regretted the same four
things over and over again. And one of those categories was sort of what you're hinting at,
which is moral regrets, where you're at a juncture, you could do the right thing,
you could do the wrong thing, and, and you do the right thing, you could do the wrong thing, and you
do the wrong thing and you regret it.
Now what I found is that while there's some people who kind of regret getting caught,
there are more people who regret the act itself.
I have literally hundreds of people in my database who regret bullying kids when they
were young, 20 years ago, 30 years ago, 40
years ago.
I have one that really sticks in my head is a 71-year-old woman in New Jersey who regretted
stealing candy from a store when she was a kid 60 years ago.
I have huge numbers of regrets about infidelity.
And in many cases, these are people who actually didn't get caught what what they really regret is the act itself and
and I find that this category of moral regrets is
powerful and revealing because it suggests to me that
Most people actually want to be good and that's the other thing about
Regret that I find so fascinating and looking at this incredible trove of regrets
That is we understand what people regret the most we actually understand what they value the most and so this negative
emotion actually points the way to
What people think makes life worth living and one of the things that people want out of life not every single person
But what a lot of people want out of life is not every single person, but what a lot of people want out of life
is actually to be good.
I buy that, yeah.
And that's a very optimistic message and nice to hold on to, that people want to be good
for the most part.
It's a really, really important and interesting question because there's a difference between
regret and disappointment.
With regret, you have agency over it.
Okay?
So in this case, for these moral regrets, people had agency over the act.
You don't necessarily have control over whether you get caught or not.
You know, it could be that you're disappointed that you got caught rather than you're regretful.
The best example of the difference between disappointment and regret comes from Janet Landman at the University of Michigan who has this brilliant. I think brilliant example where she says
imagine a scenario where a three-year-old girl loses her tooth and
She goes to sleep and she puts the tooth under her pillow
you know hoping the tooth fairy, you know waiting for the tooth fairy to give her a buck and
She wakes up in the morning, open lifts up her pillow and the tooth is still there.
She's disappointed, but her parents regret not replacing the tooth with a dollar.
And so regret depends on our control over things.
I mean, just like I'm a basketball fan.
I live in Washington, DC.
I I'm disappointed that the Washington wizards haven't won the NBA championship for 40 years,
but I can't regret it because I don't have any control over it.
Is part of the definition of regret that it's over, it's done, something's wrong, something happened,
it's over, and you can't undo it, and that's why it feels so bad because you can't fix it. Some of our regrets we can undo. So for instance, there's a guy who I write about who got a
no regrets tattoo and then he regretted it and he had his tattoo removed. Okay. So you
can undo your regrets. Another thing that you can do for regrets that are harder to
undo is that you can find the silver
lining in them. That's a much more common adaptation that people have. So once
again in this collection of 16,000 regrets, I have hundreds, I think they're
all from women that go basically like this, I regret marrying that idiot but at
least I have these two great kids so you find a
silver lining in it it doesn't necessarily that that finding the silver
lining in a regret makes it hurt a little bit less it doesn't really help
you draw a lesson from it necessarily so far we've been discussing these moral
regrets but but I know there's a lot of other kinds of regrets so let's talk
about them for example what are the other big regrets that people have?
Over and over again in the world, we see these same four regrets.
One of them is what I call boldness regrets.
I'll give you an example of it.
Among Americans who went to college, huge numbers of people regret, I was surprised,
not studying abroad.
At the same time, I have hundreds of people around the I was surprised, not studying abroad.
At the same time, I have hundreds of people around the world who have a regret like this.
X years ago, there was a man or woman who I really liked.
I wanted to ask him her out on a date, but I was too chicken to, and I
never got around to it and I've regretted it ever since.
Okay.
That's a romance regret.
We've got an education regret, a romance regret.
And then again, around around the world people say,
oh, I wish I had started a business rather than stayed in this lackluster job.
Career regret.
But all of those regrets to me are the same core regret.
It's a regret that says, if only I'd taken the chance.
And a lot of these regrets come at a juncture of decision making in our lives.
In this particular case, you can play it safe or you can take the risk.
And over and over again, people regret playing it safe.
Some people regret taking a risk, but not nearly as many people as you expect, even
if it doesn't work out.
What people regret is not taking the chance.
And to me, what that reveals is that.
You and I and the folks listening to your podcast we want like a good life involves doing something and learning and growing and trying and leading a psychologically rich life and so one of the biggest categories of regrets are these boldness regrets where people say, if only I'd taken the chance, if only I'd asked that person out, if only I'd spoken up, if only
I'd taken that trip, if only I'd started that business.
I'm speaking with bestselling author Daniel Pink and his latest book is called The Power
of Regret, how looking backwards moves us forward.
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So Daniel, the type of regrets that you're talking about, those road not taken regrets,
don't you think they get wrapped up
into a fantasy of what might have happened,
which is probably way off anyway?
Possibly, but I think the bigger issue
is that people don't know.
Let's take starting a business, all right?
I have people who regret starting a business
and having it fail, but very few.
In fact, I have people who say,
I started a business, it failed, but I don't regret
doing it because I wanted to take the chance and I know how that particular thing turned
out.
And so I do think that, of course, that we don't, you know, there are a gazillion counterfactuals
to any decision that we make.
But when the regrets that people express keep coming back to the same thing. To me it suggests what we actually want out of life.
That is, I really believe that if we understand what people regret the most, we actually understand
what they value the most.
What people value is, they realize they're not here on this planet forever.
They want to do something.
When they feel timid and when they
don't take that chance, they often regret it much more so than taking a chance and failing.
I would imagine that because it seems like that regret has
often shame attached to it, that things didn't work out, that people keep their
regrets to themselves. Is that a good idea?
There's ample research showing that disclosing our regrets
helps us make sense of them.
What's more is that when we're skittish about disclosing our regrets or negative things about ourselves,
we're skittish in part because we think that people will like us less.
When in fact the preponderance of evidence says people like us more for doing that.
So you want to reframe it and you want to disclose it.
But the most important thing is not to stay mired in it, but to draw a lesson from it.
So the lesson from saying not asking somebody out on a date is next time I have a chance
to speak up, I have a chance to take a risk, whether it's at a meeting at work, whether
it is maybe starting a side hustle along with my regular job or whether I'm back on the
dating market and I see someone I'm interested in, then actually using that lesson to apply
next time.
And when people act, they are less likely to regret it than when people don't act.
And this comes up again and again in the research.
Regrets of inaction easily outnumber regrets of action particularly as people get older I wonder why it is if if regret is so
universal that that people try to take some pride in the fact that they have
none when because it hurts they want to avoid it here's the thing regret hurts
and it's instructive, but you
can't have one without the other. And so what happens is when people try to avoid regret
because it hurts, regret stinks. All right? Regret is not fun. It's an awful feeling.
It makes our stomach churn. But the reason it makes our stomach churn is because it instructs
and clarifies us about how to make subsequent decisions. But you're not gonna get that instruction
unless you get a little bit of that pain.
The question is how do you deal with that pain?
And so by denying the pain, by sort of brushing it away,
you lose all of the instruction.
I imagine that a big source of regret for a lot of people
is family members and friends.
Which are regrets about having a relationship
that should have been intact, that was intact
or should have been intact, that ends up drifting apart.
And people want to reach out,
but they feel awkward about reaching out.
They think it's not gonna be well received.
And so they drift further apart.
So, you know, one of the huge regrets that people have
are these connection regrets with family and friends and colleagues that say, if only
I'd reached out. And to me, one of the big lessons from this research on regret
is that if you're at a juncture in your life and you're wondering, should I reach
out or should I not reach out, you've answered the question. To me, personally,
the big takeaway from this huge amount of research is that one should
always reach out.
What's a foundation regret?
Foundation regret is a regret about not building a stable platform for your life.
So if only I hadn't smoked, if only I'd saved more money, if only I'd worked harder in school,
if only I'd taken care of my health.
And again, these four core regrets tell us what makes a good life. And one of the things that makes a good life is some amount of stability.
It's hard to have a good life without some amount of stability. Stability gives us a
chance to explore. Stability gives us a chance to be a good person. Stability gives us a
chance to connect with others.
There is kind of this, if I knew then what I know now,
I would have done things differently.
But based on the research, based on your research,
young people can take a lesson from this,
is these are the things you're likely going
to regret later in life.
So you might want to try to do something about them now.
And just to reiterate, those things are what?
Did I build a stable platform for my life?
Did I take a smart risk?
Did I do the right thing?
Did I connect with people who I care about
and who care about me?
Those are the things, those are the kinds of regrets
that we should anticipate, but what color sweater
we're gonna wear, what we're gonna have for dinner,
what kind of car we're going to buy,
ultimately doesn't matter.
And so I think that what's interesting about regret,
this negative emotion, is how clarifying it is.
It instructs us for what makes a good life.
Well, there really is comfort in hearing
how it is so universal and that people are basically riddled with regret.
Yeah, you don't wanna be riddled.
You wanna be poked a little bit.
You don't want it to be a heavy blanket.
But here's the thing, I mean, truly,
there's a famous study from 40 years ago
where a social scientist named Susan Shimonov
looked at recorded conversations
with lots and lots of people.
So she recorded all these conversations that people were having organically in their world.
So college students and married couples, and then she got transcripts of all these conversations,
and then she started counting the emotions that people expressed in these everyday ordinary
conversations. The most common negative emotion that people expressed was regret.
It was the second most common emotion of any kind. The only emotion mentioned more often
than regret was love. And so why do we experience love? Because it helps us survive and get
through the day. Why do we experience regret? Because it instructs and it clarifies and if we get past this stupid idea that I should have no regrets
We can actually use this
Transformative emotion to find the path to a life well-lived
So as somebody who has really examined regret and found that there is a usefulness to it
When you talk to somebody who says oh, I have have no regrets, what do you say to them?
Well, it's a great question.
So, okay, so in this data, I'll give you two examples of this.
So in this database where I collected all these regrets,
I had people who would fill out this thing
called the World Regret Survey and then say,
I don't have any regrets,
and then proceed to tell me some regret that they had.
Okay, so, okay.
What's more, I did, I did a piece of quantitative research here where we
surveyed 4,489 Americans in this big public opinion poll, where I asked people
the question without using the R word.
And this is the key.
We asked 4,489 Americans, a representative sample of the U S population.
How often do you look back
on your life and wish you had done something differently?
Okay, so we don't say the regret word.
One percent said never.
12% said rarely.
83% said they do it occasionally.
So sometimes, you know, this word regret, for some people is so charged that they have this instinctive view
that, ah, I don't have any regrets.
But when you actually peel it back and ask them the file, so to answer your question
more directly, it's like, oh, really?
You don't have any regrets.
So do you ever look back on anything and wish you hadn't done it?
Oh, yeah.
I wish I hadn't majored in blah, blah, blah in college.
Oh, I wish I hadn't dated that person.
Oh, well, that's a regret.
Well, no, it's not.
Well, yeah, it is.
By definition.
Yes.
Well, isn't it?
I wonder why people feel that need
to put on that fake badge of honor
that they have no regrets when,
I mean, what's the point of that?
What are they trying to say? I don't know. I mean, I think part of of that? What are they trying to say?
I don't know.
I mean, I think part of it is,
is that they're trying to put forward a life performance
that seems to be flawless to other people,
even though none of our lives are flawless.
I think part of it is,
is that they have been indoctrinated to think
that we should have only positive thoughts
and positive emotions.
And the truth of the matter is,
is that we should have lots of positive thoughts and lots of positive emotions,
but our portfolio of emotions has to be at least somewhat diversified. So if you
have only positive emotions, you're not gonna do very well. You have to have
some negative emotions because not that many of them and not an overwhelming
number of them, but negative emotions are instructive.
Imagine somebody who couldn't experience fear, right? That person is not going to escape a
burning building. And so negative emotions serve a function. And so we've been seduced into thinking
the only emotions that we should have are positive emotions. And while it's true that we should have
a lot of positive emotions, that is not a diversified emotional portfolio. We would never have all of our stocks
in our financial portfolio in one industry
or in one sector.
We would want a little bit of diversification
and that's what we want with our emotions.
And the blue chip emotional stock
for negative emotions is regret.
And I think as you said,
there's such an emphasis on positive emotions.
I've never heard anybody talk about regret this way. Most of the talk about
regret is to how to avoid it. But clearly you have a different and I think more
interesting take on the topic. My guest has been Daniel Pink and the book is
called The Power of Regret. How Looking Backward Moves Us Forward.
You'll find a link to that book in the show notes.
Thanks, Daniel.
I really enjoyed this.
Thanks a lot.
Rock and roll.
Thanks for having me.
I enjoyed it.
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It's interesting to think that every man-made product, object, invention, business, piece
of art, everything started as an idea that popped into somebody's head somehow.
How does that happen? What is the process that allows people to generate great ideas?
We sometimes call that process creativity, but
but creativity tends to have a kind of a
magical, who knows where it came from, who knows when it will strike again kind of
quality.
Yet, if you look at great ideas and then reverse engineer them and how they came to be, there
must be something we can learn from that process so that we can all apply it and have more
great ideas.
That's what Anthony Fredericks is here to discuss.
Anthony is a nationally recognized educator and an award-winning and best-selling author
of more than 150 books.
His latest is titled From Fizzle to Sizzle, The Hidden Forces Crushing Your Creativity
and How You Can Overcome Them.
Hey, Anthony, welcome to Something You Should Know.
Thank you, Mike.
I'm looking forward to it.
I think a lot of times when people hear a discussion that has to do with creativity,
they think, oh, well, that's just a discussion for creative types, you know, artists and
writers and musicians. But you have a more practical view of this topic. So what is creativity
to you?
Let me use a quote by Albert Einstein.
Creativity is intelligence having fun.
Throughout our school lives, we have been trained, if you will,
to look for right answers.
If you consider the fact that most students
between kindergarten and 12th grade have taken about 2,500 test quizzes and exams,
and they've been asked over one and a half million questions.
What the research is showing is that
about 80% of those questions on the test
and 80% of the verbal questions
tend to be factual questions.
In other words, we have been trained
throughout our education career
to look for the right answer.
Creativity moves beyond that right answer.
It plays with that knowledge,
it experiments with that knowledge,
it has fun with that knowledge,
as Einstein was alluding to.
Creativity is letting our minds roam with no barriers,
no restrictions whatsoever.
And I would want to do that, why?
I mean, I can understand if you're a creative type
or you're a child, but in the grownup world,
why is this important?
Because there are many times in our daily schedules
when we need something new, mentally speaking,
that is when we need a different way of doing things
or times when we would benefit from a new idea,
we all need creative approaches
that not only increase our productivity,
but also give us an opportunity to search for new answers,
give us a new way of seeing the world.
And what we've discovered is that creative acts,
done every day, keeps us mentally agile
and professionally competent,
able to deal with some of the challenges
that we may face in both our personal and professional lives.
And so when you say creative acts, what does that mean?
Give me some examples of daily creative activities.
And I'm going to I'm going to step back
a little bit and say one of the one of the big myths that we have in the in the area
of creativity is that creativity is something that we only use about three or
four times during the year
when our boss says we need a new marketing plan
or our supervisor says we need to develop a new product.
And we think creativity is big events.
Creativity is actually small events,
little things that we do every day.
The myth that creativity is a big event
sort of holds us in check, if you will.
It prevents us from taking a look at creativity as small things.
Here are some examples of some small things.
Going to a Peruvian restaurant
because you've never been to a Peruvian restaurant.
Driving on a new route home.
Instead of taking the freeway, taking a rural road to get home.
Talking with your child about some ways
of building structures with wooden blocks.
It's the little things that we do every day
that makes us creative.
Creativity is not the big events,
it's how we prepare for those big events
with a series of daily events in our lives.
Trying a new recipe, for example.
These are the things that sort of prepare the mind for the big events and also
lets us know internally that we are all creative creatures.
Do you think though that there are some people who are more creative than others or are we all equally?
creative if we apply it
We are all equally creative one of the things that tends to hold a lot of people back in
Terms of their creativity is that we tend to compare ourselves with so-called
Creative giants if if we're an artist we might compare ourselves to Picasso and say, well, you know what, I'll never be a Picasso. If we're a writer, we may compare ourselves
to Stephen King and say, well, I'll never measure up to Stephen King. Those comparisons are very,
very dangerous because we tend to think of creativity as big events and big people. And that's a mistake.
We all have creative possibilities.
We all have the intelligence and the capabilities of becoming more creative in our daily life,
no matter what our age may be.
Do you think that creative people, people who practice creativity, think of themselves as creative?
In other words, are the creative people aware that they are and the not so creative people
aware that they are?
Let me answer that with a little bit of most compelling book.
Back in 2006, Carol Dwight, who is a researcher at Stanford,
wrote a very compelling book called Mindsets.
And in it she says,
we either accept one of two mindsets,
either we're in a fixed mindset,
that is we've determined that we are not creative
and so we're not gonna work to change that.
And the other mindset is the growth mindset.
That's those of us who say, you know what,
creativity is doing something, a little bit of something every day. I's those of us who say, you know what, creativity is doing
something, a little bit of something every day. I can grow, I can improve, I can achieve, I can
do things that I have not done before, and I can think things that I have not thought of before.
So, depending on what mindset we accept, that will determine how creative we believe ourselves to be.
I think there's a tendency to believe,
and I've thought this from time to time too,
that creativity is great,
but creativity means coming up with new ideas.
New ideas aren't necessarily good ideas,
they're just new ideas. And that
you waste a lot of time, or maybe waste is the wrong word, but you can spend a lot of
time being creative and not getting anywhere. You're just being creative.
Exactly. And one another one of the things that tends to hold us back in terms of creativity
is a fear of failure. I'll use an example.
A number of years ago, there was an Englishman
who had come up with, had tried and tried and tried
to create a new invention,
something that every housewife uses.
And he failed 5,762 times.
On the 5,763rd time he succeeded. His name, James Dyson, who invented the tornado
vacuum cleaner. He failed over 5,700 times in creating that, but he was of the growth
mindset and said, you know what, let's give it another try.
And the latest figures that I have are from 2019 and 2019, his company had profits in
excess of 6 billion, that's with a B, dollars.
This is from somebody who had 5,700 failures on his resume.
So yes, we create a lot of ideas.
Not every one of those ideas is going to be a world
shaking or earth shattering event.
And that's okay.
The creation of the ideas, whether the good or bad, is what is important, not determining
ahead of time.
Well, this is not going to be a very, these aren't going to be very good ideas.
We need to have the belief in ourselves that if we can generate sufficient ideas
and are comfortable with that generative process,
then we can make creativity
a regular normal part of our lives.
Sometimes it seems that the word creativity,
or that's very creative is another word for, this really sucks and I don't get it.
Yeah we tend to I guess downplay it and you know a little sucking here and
there is good for the soul. I'm reminded of I'm reminded of another anecdote. Thomas,
Thomas Edison, when he was trying to improve on the light bulb, he kept trying and trying for
months and months. A reporter from a local newspaper was sent to interview him. He said,
Mr. Edison, it seems like you're trying and trying and you keep failing. And Thomas Edison
looked the reporter and said, you know what?
I haven't failed.
I have just found 10,000 ways that don't work.
So it's our concept of failure.
Failure is a normal part of the creative process.
If we're willing to understand and accept the fact
that there will be lots and lots of failures
and Thomas Edison's case, 10,000 failures, then we give ourselves
permission to be more creative, to think outside the box, to use a very hackneyed phrase.
It also seems that creativity is also like an excuse, like, well, you know,
you take an art class, let's say, and everybody in the class is doing well except Bob. Bob's picture
really is not up to par. It's very creative, but it sucks. It's terrible. It's nowhere close to what the
other students are doing, and people have a tendency, I think, that being an example
of saying, oh he's so creative. You know, it's like kids finger paint things. I
mean, yeah, I guess they're creative, but they're just fingers in paint. I mean,
there's nothing really spectacular about it
other than it's different.
It's not crayons, it's finger paint, but it's nothing great.
Yeah, and you used the key word, it's different.
You know, we may think that Bob's painting sucks,
but it's Bob's expression.
It's his way of looking at the world.
If we apply arbitrary criteria criteria assessment tools to it,
everyone says, Bob's spending sucks.
Bob may say, you know, I'm okay with this.
I've expressed myself on a piece of paper.
I've done what I've set out to do and I'm okay with that.
And he gives himself permission to venture out
and try things.
There is another wonderful study where a presenter,
and I think it was part of a Ted talk,
invited an audience to each take a sheet of paper
and a pencil, turn to the person next to you,
and in the next 30 seconds,
draw a portrait of that individual.
The people were working and very hard, diligent.
30 seconds, he said,
how many of you,
when you were sharing that portrait with your partner,
said, oh, I'm not a very good artist,
or I can't paint very well,
or I'm sorry for all of this and every
hand in the audience went up. He did that with a group of kindergarten kids and asked that question
and no hands went up. What's interesting is kids have this very imaginative view of the world and
as we grow older and we get get into paying income taxes and mortgages and
job responsibilities, etc, etc. We narrow our focus and then we become more critical of our
our own creativity and a little bit more critical of the creativity of others.
Well there also seems to be, as I listen to you tell that story, I've never
thought of myself as much of an artist. I don't, you know, if you ask me to draw a picture
of somebody, it's going to be more stick figure, it's not going to be very good. Consequently,
art is not a direction I've ever gone in. I don't have much interest in becoming an
artist because I kind of have convinced myself I'm not very good at it. And that kind of feeds on itself.
It's a cycle of if you're not interested, you don't do it. If you don't do it, you're
not very good. If you're not very good, you're not interested. And there it goes.
Art is simply a creative expression. Art is simply a way of allowing the pictures in our mind to be expressed,
say for example, on a sheet of paper. And that's okay. Your art may be different from my art, from
Picasso's art, but it's art nonetheless. Is it going to be great art? I don't know. I can't, I'm not in a position to evaluate it.
But what I can say is let's give everyone an opportunity or let's give ourselves an
opportunity to be creatively expressive.
And that may be through art, that may be through music, that may be through sports, that may
be through writing, whatever.
We need those opportunities and we can give ourselves those opportunities as adults
in our daily lives, as I mentioned before,
by doing one little creative thing every day.
New recipe, new way home, new kind of food,
a new coat and a color that you've never worn before.
Little bit of expression each day
turns us into creative individuals.
Let's go back, because you said at the beginning,
you know, one example of being creative
is to go to a Peruvian restaurant
because you've never been to one.
Well, how is that creative?
What is that?
That's just your idea of creativity.
But how does eating Peruvian food make me more creative?
Well, if all we do is eat steak and potatoes, we have no idea of what else is out there. If we aren't willing to do a little bit of imagining, then we sort of do ourselves a
disservice. Let me take a side road off of that.
Oftentimes when I was a classroom teacher,
parents would ask,
what are some things I can do
to help my child become more creative?
And I said, one of the things that you don't wanna do
is you don't wanna go to a toy store
and buy a product that says educational on the package,
because that's just a marketing technique to sell more toys.
I told them the three best creative things
that parents can give their kids is an old sheet,
a box of crayons and some cardboard boxes
and let them create their own universes,
their own castles, their own spaceships,
their own pirate ships, whatever it may be.
When kids have realized that there are unlimited ways of thinking,
we are not looking for the right answer, as might be the case in a computer game.
We're looking for a multiplicity of answers.
But don't you think that when you're playing a computer game, because I watch my boys play computer games,
and I'm not particularly good at it,
that trying to find that right way out or up the wall or into the castle or to get to the bad guy,
seems like it's a pretty creative way because there aren't a lot of, you know,
there aren't a lot of signs that say this way. You've got to figure it out.
I'm going to disagree with you slightly there, Mike, because what we're trying to figure
out is what the game creators have determined to be the right way. Sure, there's some some
mental gymnastics in there. But ultimately, to win the game or to score the most points, we have to find the answer,
so to speak, that somebody else developed. Give kids an old sheet and some cardboard boxes.
There's no right way to put those together. If we step back and watch the kids turn that sheet in those boxes into a spaceship or pirate ship.
There's no right way or actually no wrong way to do that. They are letting their imaginations go.
And as Albert Einstein said, imagination is more important than knowledge.
I suspect that one of the things that kind of beats the creativity out of us is I imagine almost everybody can remember some time when they had an idea that was criticized.
Oh, that's not very good. Bobby, that's, you know, that's like and you and those you take those punches and they hurt and you think,
oh, well, better not do that again.
Yeah, exactly.
And that carries forward into our work environments as well.
I recall one study that found that the average worker
in this country had something like 300 negative comments
in the course of a week.
Now imagine, you know, trying to get around, working through 300 negative comments of a week. Now imagine, you know, trying to get around,
working through 300 negative comments in a week.
Kids get even more than that.
There's times that kids hear the word no,
don't go there, don't do that, don't touch that,
those kinds of things.
Those have a significant psychological effect
on the development of our creativity. Whether
we are children or whether we are adults, those negative comments significantly
affect our personal creativity. Yeah, well, but if little Johnny's about to
set his sister on fire, he's gonna need to hear no yeah I'm sorry but I hate to interrupt your
creativity here but you can't do that. No no point well taken Mike there are times when we do
needs to say no for safety reasons obviously but to say no you know you can't you can't walk in
a puddle for example or you can't you know in the mud. Those are very creative kinds of activities for kids.
There's very little safety involved in those activities.
And kids tend to hear a lot of that,
the know in the potential creative activities
that they participate in.
What are some of the other research about creativity,
because you seem to have quite a bit of that knowledge that people might be surprised to hear about how it works or how it doesn't work or whatever.
Here's one of the things that one of the creative studies that really stood out for me, and it was a couple of years ago.
ago, they were taking a look at it, a major corporation, taking a look at the creative productivity of engineers. And this was happening to be at a major oil company. And the executives
of the company were concerned about the lack of creativity on the part of some of their employees.
And they decided to bring in a team of psychologists to see if they could determine any significant
differences between those who were deemed to be creative and those who were essentially categorized
as non-creative. And over the course of three months, the team of psychologists asked tons and
tons of questions focused on childhood experiences, family influences, academic performance,
and even favorite colors. And after they analyzed all the data, they concluded that one factor
clearly separated the two groups. And here's that factor. The creative people thought they were creative, and the less creative people didn't think they were.
Yeah, I believe that.
And I think everybody, even people who don't consider
themselves creative types, have had moments several times
in their life where things have clicked, where ideas have come.
So this idea that some people aren't creative
just doesn't ring true. And
clearly you've pointed out that it doesn't. My guest has been Anthony Frederick. He is
a nationally recognized educator and author of the book From Fizzle to Sizzle, The Hidden
Forces Crushing Your Creativity and How You Can Overcome Them. And there's a link to that
book in the show notes. Hey, thanks Anthony. Thanks for coming on. Okay. Thank you so much, Mike.
I appreciate the opportunity.
Do you like white meat? Most of us do.
In fact, the American chicken industry ends up with a big surplus of dark meat
because Americans prefer white meat.
And it's not just the taste.
It seems that a lot of us are a little squeamish about dark meat because Americans prefer white meat, and it's not just the taste.
It seems that a lot of us are a little squeamish about dark meat,
because, well, when you're faced with a chicken leg,
there's no hiding the fact that that's the leg of an animal.
Up until 50 years ago, chickens were sold almost exclusively as whole chickens,
but now we prefer the nondescript neatly packaged products that don't really resemble what it used to be
standing running or swimming around.
It turns out that other countries aren't quite so squeamish as we are.
Most Europeans actually prefer the taste of the gamey or dark meat,
which is nutrient rich with higher levels of iron and zinc.
And that is something you should know.
I love getting those emails that start out with something to the effect of, my friend
listens to your podcast all the time and suggested I give it a try and I really like it.
If you know someone who might enjoy this podcast, please share it with them.
I'm Micah Rothers, thanks for listening today to Something You Should Know. Do you love Disney? Do you love top 10 lists? Then you are
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I had Danielle and Megan record some answers
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As some people might say, Eric, we are all about alliterations and we are all
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