Good one.
12 Ways to Get Off Your Ass and Out of Your Comfort Zone
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Want to be more creative? Take a step back and look at your daily routine.
If you are like most people you get up about the same time everyday, eat similar things for breakfast each day, take a familiar route to work, have a list of tasks to get done before lunch, eat lunch, get some more work done, head home the way you always do, have some dinner and do your normal evening activities before turning in for the night. Then you get up and do it all again. We are all creatures of habit. There is comfort in this predictability. This is all well and good if you are content with your level of thinking and creativity moving along at the same predictable pace.
If you want to elevate your creative thinking, you need to get off your ass and break out of that comfort zone. To get a new perspective on things you can’t just sit in your “ivory tower” and expect it to come to you in a flash of genius. You need to deliberately get out there and experience new things and meet new people.
Here are 12 routine-breaking things that will give you a new perspective and open your mind to new thinking (kind of a 12-Step Program for unleashing creativity):
- Take a new form of transportation to work next week.
- Get out of your normal work environment at least 4 hours each week.
- Strike up a conversation with a complete stranger.
- Take a “Radical Sabbatical” with your team and experience something you all have never done together before and share perspectives with each other afterward. This could be an hour, a day or a week together.
- Set up a monthly lunch with someone outside your department or company and get his or her perspective on a problem you are trying to solve.
- Ask your family (especially your kids if you have them) to help you solve a problem.
- Read a magazine, book or blog that you would not normally read.
- Watch television programs that you would not normally watch.
- Listen to radio stations or music you would not normally listen to.
- Take a walk in a park, go to a museum, a zoo or a movie during office hours. (Gasp!)
- Go shopping (to an actual store, not on the Internet) for something you don’t need or even want. Talk to the salesperson and ask a lot of questions.
- Eat only things you have never tried before for a week.
So, what are you waiting for? Get up, get out there and become more creative! What else would you add to the list?
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Mark,
Nice post. I remember once trying out a new route to work once and ended up in a collision so remember to keep focus on the task in hand while allowing the periphery to stimulate you.
12 is amagic number in many walks of life and I have used it to set up an action plan for individuals to reclaim a safe climate. You can see it at www.hksuperh.com
I like your attitude, and I believe your advise is sound. Being unemployed for the last 15 months I have fallen into a sort of comfort zone as well, get up, make coffee, go on internet and do various job search's. I need to break out of this slump as well!
Got any good idea on how to do that in this economic climate?
Don,
Sorry about the slump. Quick brainstorm just for you.....(if you try any of these, at least try #7)
1) Try taking a job (for a month) that you would never have considered taking before - one that makes you so uncomfortable you get "comfortable at being uncomfortable" - and maybe learn something new about yourself.
2) Take a job you've always wanted to do (for a month)
3) Wake up & then go to the gym before you're allowed to make yourself coffee.
4) Internet search for jobs is like a needle in a haystack approach - try knocking on doors - in person - don't stay where its so comfortable (behind the computer screen).
5) offer to work for free somewhere that you want to work at.....put some "skin in the game" (your time)
6) write about your favorite things, share yourself with them....find others who value the same interests as you & network with them
7) Pretend you are on a treasure hunt - not a job search.....99.99% of the time, it's the treasure hunters that find the treasure
Satyendra Mishra said: Good one.
Thanks! Let me know if you try any of the suggestions. They key is to really make it part of your life and not just a one-off.
Cheers,
Brett
Raff Viton said: Don, Sorry about the slump. Quick brainstorm just for you.....(if you try any of these, at least try #7) 1) Try taking a job (for a month) that you would never have considered taking before - one that makes you so uncomfortable you get "comfortable at being uncomfortable" - and maybe learn something new about yourself. 2) Take a job you've always wanted to do (for a month) 3) Wake up & then go to the gym before you're allowed to make yourself coffee. 4) Internet search for jobs is like a needle in a haystack approach - try knocking on doors - in person - don't stay where its so comfortable (behind the computer screen). 5) offer to work for free somewhere that you want to work at.....put some "skin in the game" (your time) 6) write about your favorite things, share yourself with them....find others who value the same interests as you & network with them 7) Pretend you are on a treasure hunt - not a job search.....99.99% of the time, it's the treasure hunters that find the treasure
Great stuff Raff!
Another thing you could do while on the job hunt is to concentrate on a hobby you have or pick up a new hobby. You may never have time like this again so use it to get creative. Pick a passion and follow it. If you like music and have always wanted to learn guitar then learn guitar. Join on-line chat groups about guitar. Hang out at guitar stores. Meet people. Start a band. Play bars. You will meet people which might lead to a job, you will have some fun, the job search will seem less stressful and your view on how you approach the job search and life in general will change. When I was between jobs I started painting and have never stopped.
Harold Forbes said: Mark, Nice post. I remember once trying out a new route to work once and ended up in a collision so remember to keep focus on the task in hand while allowing the periphery to stimulate you. 12 is amagic number in many walks of life and I have used it to set up an action plan for individuals to reclaim a safe climate. You can see it at www.hksuperh.com
Harold,
Sounds like we are like-minded in how we apprach things. Just looked at your site. Nice stuff and thanks for the comment.
Have a great weekend.
Brett
A few months ago I realized I was in a rut at the gym and needed to add some new exercises to my routine. I found some suggestions online and decided that dead lifts were the way to go. The new exercise was great and it was empowering to get out of the comfort zone and try a few other new exercises. What I realized the next day was that it wasn't just the initial act that got me out of my workout rut, but the fact that I couldn't walk normal for a week that really changed my perspective. It showed me that while I had been working really hard for months, there were muscle groups I was still missing.
I think the list above is filled with great change of pace actions that will indeed change your perspective. While they seem like minor things, you never know how that five different minutes in your day can have a ripple effect on the rest of your day, week, month or even your entire lifestyle!
AdamRobertMiller said: A few months ago I realized I was in a rut at the gym and needed to add some new exercises to my routine. I found some suggestions online and decided that dead lifts were the way to go. The new exercise was great and it was empowering to get out of the comfort zone and try a few other new exercises. What I realized the next day was that it wasn't just the initial act that got me out of my workout rut, but the fact that I couldn't walk normal for a week that really changed my perspective. It showed me that while I had been working really hard for months, there were muscle groups I was still missing. I think the list above is filled with great change of pace actions that will indeed change your perspective. While they seem like minor things, you never know how that five different minutes in your day can have a ripple effect on the rest of your day, week, month or even your entire lifestyle!
Thanks for your reply! Hope you have fully recovered.
Cheers,
Brett


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