Thursday, April 30, 2020

Creatives on Their Most Valued Habits



Morning pages, writing prompts, and keeping an ideas diary: these practices are all too familiar to creative types. We rounded up some more unexpected rituals that you can incorporate into your days to make your creative life richer.

***

Be bored 

Kyle T. Webster is not afraid of being bored. In fact, he makes a point of creating opportunities for unstructured time that can give rise to some brilliant ideas. In his 99U talk, he pointed out how scarce that blank time is becoming in our lives. “It’s a beautiful, blank, unexplored space that we will probably lose altogether if we’re not careful,” said Webster. “We need to seek it out and bask in it.”

By reframing it as a blessing and an opportunity, we have the chance to embrace boredom as the time when our subconscious gets to work on ideas and makes them better. As Webster says, “This is where a new idea could be lying in wait for those who are open to discovering it.” Allow for the space between.

Imagine away 

Ashley C. Ford brought down the house with her inspiring talk at the 2019 99U Conference. At the heart of her message was the idea that your imagination is the greatest transformational tool we have. “If you can be brave enough to imagine past your understanding, you can change everything,” she said. Make it a regular practice to push yourself past the comfort zone of your assumptions, and see where it takes you. 

Make lists

Stephanie Pereira, Director of NEW INC at the New Museum says, “I try and start a new list every morning, but sometimes that slips to once per week. I currently have one of those very thin Muji notebooks, but really any paper will do—the less fancy, the better. I’ve found it to be incredibly soothing just to simply write a list.” The ritual of list-making and seeing your ideas and tasks on paper can illuminate patterns, inspire you, and track all the seeds of ideas that can eventually bloom into significant projects. 

Get to know your brain

Dr. Sahar Yousef is a cognitive neuroscientist specializing in strategic consulting for businesses looking to improve productivity and structure in always-on workplaces. She coaches her clients to think of the brain as a muscle, a malleable tool that you can work on strengthening, especially when it comes to improving focus and building up your attention span. “You are the designer, you know your brain and your own conscious experience,” Yousef says. The key is taking the time to get to know yourself without passing judgment. You have a natural rhythm, and times when your productivity peaks and wanes. Keep track of when you are most productive, note your daily “slump times,” and set a few strict ground rules for those time-suck habits like checking your inbox or Slack notifications. 

Be mindful

Grace Bonney would be the first to credit the internet and early social media for the success of Design*Sponge, her design site that folded in early 2019 after 15 years. But the time-wasting potential of Instagram and other apps is the big obstacle to a healthy relationship with social media. Bonney has found the key to be mindfulness about her habits. She starts by asking a crucial question before clicking, “‘Why am I going there?’ If I go to Instagram to be inspired, I don’t have any guilt about how much time I spend. But if I am going on there to read things that will make me feel good about myself or feel connected to people, I need to understand why am I going there and not to real people in my real life.”

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

How to Deal with Time Pressure at Work



Time pressure comes in different forms: you might have a constant feeling that there are simply too few hours in the day, or perhaps it’s more that you are working on a single important project with a tight deadline looming. Whichever you’re experiencing, research has shown what you may have discovered for yourself—time pressure can either be your friend or your foe. 

In some cases, the relentless tick of the clock might leave you feeling paralyzed and stressed out, which obviously won’t do you or your work any good. But that’s not the whole story; in other cases, the pressure of one or more deadlines can fuel your motivation and actually improve your creativity. 

“Time pressure is activating, so you feel like you have more energy. This can translate into higher levels of creativity, you feel more aroused, and you can come up with more novel and better-quality ideas,” says Professor Sandra Ohly, a work psychologist at The University of Kassel in Germany. It’s not just your creativity that can benefit from time pressure. Other research has linked it with more proactive job behavior, which is when you go beyond your formal remit at work and take on additional responsibilities.  

So what can you do to ensure that time pressure works in your favor rather than against the good of the work? 

***

1. Cultivate a challenge mindset

Part of it is simply a question of degree: taken to the extreme, too little time will, obviously, be a problem if you simply cannot get the job done. However, in moderation, pressure can work in your favor. Research has now shown that this upside depends on your attitude, especially whether you perceive the pressure as a motivating challenge, rather than as an inescapable hindrance. 

Consider a study that Ohly conducted involving 150 R&D engineers at a German automotive company. The engineers completed several psychology tests, multiple times a day over several days, including measures of time pressure and creativity. What Ohly found is that time pressure was often a boon to creativity, especially when the engineers saw pressure as a challenge.  

What does it mean to see time pressure this way? It means that you recognize “the more effort you put in, the likelihood is you will be able to cope with that pressure,” Ohly explains, “so it’s stressful because the situation requires a lot of effort but at the same time it’s manageable.” The converse to seeing time pressure as a challenge is to see it as what psychologists call a “hindrance stressor,” which is when it feels unavoidable and unmanageable. 

Further, consider a study by researchers in France and the Netherlands. They surveyed hundreds of managers of French R&D research teams and found that greater time pressure was associated with benefits to their team members’ creativity so long as the time pressure was not too intense, and especially when the team had a “learning orientation,” that is, a desire to learn new things, and to develop skills and knowledge. For teams with a learning attitude, time pressure was a motivating force. 

Findings like these suggest that, at least in moderation, time pressure isn’t in itself either a good or bad thing, it’s more about how you view it and respond to it. Of course, this begs the question of what you can do to cultivate a mindset that sees the pressure as a motivating challenge, rather than as an inescapable source of stress.

2. Boost your confidence and focus on small steps

The French R&D manager study, above, highlights the importance of seeing time pressure as an opportunity rather than a threat, as a chance to improve and develop your professional skills. Ohly adds that it helps if you believe in your ability to cope, so it helps to remind you of past successes. Another tip is to break down your task or project into manageable chunks: “it helps to remind yourself that the small steps taken together help you reach the whole goal,” she says. 

It’s easier said than done, but you should also try to meet the challenge of time pressure as much as possible by working more efficiently (by prioritizing and being creative), rather than by simply working faster and longer, both of which are likely to undermine the benefits of time pressure by increasing your risk of exhaustion, according to a study led by Johannes Gutenberg-University published last year. 

3. Find out the reason for the pressure

Managers also have an important role to play, by explaining the need for the time pressure and the importance of the work. Research by Harvard business psychologist Teresa Amabile suggests time pressure is more likely to be beneficial when people see it as necessary for the project (for instance, to compete effectively with competitors) rather than as unnecessary and avoidable. By providing a vision and empowering your team with resources, meaning anything from software to decision-making autonomy, managers can also motivate staff rise to the challenge created by time pressure. As a general rule, you’re more likely to respond to time pressure with a “challenge mindset” if you believe in the value of the work you’re doing and find it inherently rewarding. 

4. If you have a neurotic personality, time pressure can be your friend

Bear in mind that time pressure might be more beneficial to some people than others. A recent finding suggests, perhaps surprisingly, that it is particularly advantageous to people who have more neurotic personalities: that is, who are more prone to mood swings, anxiety, and self-doubt. 

Kai Bormann, a professor of management at Bielefeld University in Germany made this discovery after asking hundreds of professionals to rate their levels of neuroticism and to keep a diary for five working days about their experience of time pressure and their daily creativity. Time pressure helped the more neurotic participants match the creativity of their non-neurotic colleagues. Bormann thinks this is because the pressure helps keep their minds on task, preventing them from getting distracted by worries.

Critically, this benefit was only true for chronic, predictable time pressure—the kind that is consistent and you know is coming. Unexpected time pressure is only likely to fuel the neurotic person’s anxiety. Bormann says that neurotic people can use his findings to their advantage by “rafting a personal working environment that provides comparable doses of time pressure over time.”

Whatever your personality type, time pressure can feel stressful and uncomfortable, but it’s worth considering the opposite scenario: having too little to do or not feeling challenged by your work can also be unpleasant. The next time you’re up against the clock, remember there are practical steps and mental strategies you can use to turn the situation to your advantage. Ask your manager why time is of such essence and remind yourself why the project matters to you. Above all, try to see that extra pressure as an exciting challenge rather than a suffocating threat. 

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

10 free audiobooks to download today

Exercising under lockdown has its challenges, and depending on where you are in the world, you may be having to seriously adapt your normal exercise routine. For those who aren't allowed to stray too far from home, you may find that your walking, jogging and cycling routines are becoming a little boring. 

So why not grab a pair of headphones and use the time to experience those classic novels you never got round to reading? Audiobooks aren't just for exercise, either, they're also the perfect accompaniment to doing household chores or even mindful activities such as jigsaws. Or, you can always sit in quiet contemplation and lose yourself completely in an audiobook (see our free online resources if you need more ideas for what to do at home).

How to download audiobooks for free

There are three main places where you can get audiobooks for free legally. Firstly, there’s Librivox, a group of worldwide volunteers who record audio recordings of works that are out of copyright. These are then placed in the public domain, so they’re all completely free for anyone to enjoy. The only drawback is that the readers are enthusiastic amateurs rather than professionals, although the examples we’ve included here are all pretty decent quality. 

The second way you can listen to audiobooks without charge is by taking out a free trial to an online audio library like AudibleKobo or Scribd. The advantage of this is that these services contain audio versions of both modern and classic books, read by top professionals. The downside is that you’ll only get one free audiobook per free trial, and then you’ll start paying.

The third method of enjoying free audiobooks is by streaming them via Audible’s new service, Audible Stories. There’s a good mix of classic and modern books on this service, you can start listening immediately, without even having to sign up, and there's no limit to the number of audiobooks you can enjoy. However, you can’t download these audiobooks, only stream them, which may be a problem, depending on your internet connection. 

In this post, we’ve gathered together 10 amazing novels that appear on most or all of these platforms; some even read by A-list actors. Classics in the true sense of the word, these novels continue to inspire spin-off TV and movies today, but if you’ve not experienced the originals, you’re really missing out. So take the plunge today, and get downloading...

01. Little Women



Greta Gerwig's recent movie adaptation has brought Little Women back into the spotlight

Louisa May Alcott’s family saga Little Women may have been written in 1868, but its influence still reverberates around the world today. Indeed, when Greta Gerwig’s movie was launched earlier this year, it was striking how many women around the world spoke of reading it as a key memory from their childhood. 

If that doesn’t include you (and believe us, this is a book for all genders), we’d urge you to find out what all the fuss is about. You’ll soon fall in love with the March sisters, who experience hard times while their father is away at war, testing the bonds between them.

02. The Invisible Man

There have been lots of TV, comic and movie adaptations inspired by The Invisible Man, including the 2020 thriller that hit cinemas earlier this year. Yet none save the 1933 black and white movie actually follow the original story by HG Wells, so if you haven’t read that yet, you’re in for a real treat. 

Published in 1897, this dark and punchy tale follows an optics scientist who turns himself invisible and then, despite his best efforts, can’t figure out how to reverse the experiment. Gripping from start to finish, this chilling novel helped established Wells as "the father of science fiction". 

03. Pride & Prejudice

Pride and Prejudice is a romantic novel of manners written by Jane Austen in 1813 that still captivates audiences around the world today. Why? In part because, rather than being either pure fluffy romance or misery porn, there’s an underlying realism at its beating heart that reflects social relationships authentically. 

And so while society may have changed over the years, the challenges and trials faced by the main character, Elizabeth Bennet, remain compelling. This is a beautifully written story embracing universal themes; one which continues to entrance readers across the globe.

04. Dracula



Enjoyed the latest BBC adaptation of Dracula, now available on Netflix? Then check out the audiobook of the original too

A century before Buffy and Twilight captured the hearts of emo kids everywhere, Irish author Bram Stoker’s novel first popularised vampires within the world of literature. But in all that time, and despite spawning generations of questionable genre fare, this 1897 novel has never ceased to be a must-read. 

The story tells the tale of Count Dracula's attempt to move from Transylvania to England to find new blood and spread the undead curse, and of the battle between Dracula and a group led by Professor Abraham Van Helsing. It’s told not as a straight narrative, but as a series of letters, diary entries, newspaper articles, and ships' log entries; but once you get used to that, you’ll soon be hooked.

05. Jane Eyre

Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre might be an academic staple now, but on its publication in 1847, it was very controversial, due to its intimate, first person narrative. From the first line to the last ("Reader, I married him"), the book's main character addresses us personally and intensely, and the potency of the effect remains strong even today, especially in audiobook form. Packed with twists and turns, emotion and tragedy, this romantic, but not sentimental story really packs a punch with a modern-day audience.

06. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

Yes, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is a children’s book. But if you’re looking for the ultimate escapism during lockdown, then you can’t do better than this weird and anarchic tale of a young girl’s nightmarish trip down a rabbit hole to a magical land. If you haven’t glanced at it since your own childhood, you’ve probably forgotten how brilliantly and wittily written it is, and how mindbogglingly surreal it gets in places. What's more, some of the social and political metaphors that passed over your head back then will probably gain new meaning now you're all grown-up.

07. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button




Kobo's audiobook of F Scott Fitzgerald's classic story is available as part of a free trial

Written by F. Scott Fitzgerald and first published in 1992, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button tells the story of a man who ages in reverse: born with the appearance of an 80-year-old man, he then spends his life looking younger and younger. If the 2008 movie starring Brad Pitt went on too long for you, then good news: the original is actually a short story. And it’s a brilliant one, too, effortlessly pulling you into the character's mysterious world, and making you empathise with his struggle as the ultimate outsider from society. 

08. Around the World in 80 Days

Written by Jules Verne in 1872, this classic tale sees Phileas Fogg of London and his French valet attempt to circumnavigate the world in 80 days for a big-money bet. It’s quite simply a rollicking adventure featuring well-crafted characters and a ton of excitement. While times may have changed, there’s a grand vision and an underlying humanity to this story that makes it as enticing and entertaining as when it was first published.

09. Les Miserables




The audiobook of Les Miserables is a very different experience to the musical movie featuring Anne Hathaway

Long before it became a hit musical, or was turned into a film, Les Miserables was a much-loved historical novel by Victor Hugo. Published in 1862, it follows the lives and interactions of several characters in the period culminating in the 1832 June Rebellion in Paris. Pulling in multiple themes, from politics and moral philosophy to architecture and urban design, this isn’t a light read, nor a particularly happy one, but you will find it a profound experience you won’t regret, and will never forget.

10. The Jungle Book

Written in 1894 by English author Rudyard Kipling, The Jungle Book is a collection of children’s stories set in a forest in India. Telling the tales of a series of animals, including Shere Khan the tiger, Baloo the bear, and Mowgli, a boy raised in the jungle by wolves, it may have inspired the Disney adaptations, but only broadly: it’s very much its own set of stories. Charming, entertaining and often thrilling, this is a must-read for audiences of all ages.

To buy the amazing book 

Click on the link ➡ 

https://amzn.to/3aH5asX






Monday, April 27, 2020

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Saturday, April 25, 2020

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