Cover Image: July 2012 Scientific American Magazine See Inside

Cultivate Creativity in Everyday Life














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Image: COVER PHOTOILLUSTRATION BY AARON GOODMAN

My old apartment in New York City had seen better days. Stains had darkened the carpet by several shades, and gusts of wind would blow crumbs of decaying brick from the walls. But those details were easily overshadowed by the glaring health code violation that was the bathroom.

The ceiling had sprung a leak directly over the toilet. Whenever the upstairs neighbors took a shower, dirty water came down in a robust pitter-patter; other times a light drizzle descended. Nature calls whenever she chooses, however, and one day I needed relief during a bathroom downpour. So I threw on my rain slicker, opened my umbrella and charged in. After that day—and until the ceiling was fixed—I kept an umbrella hanging on the towel rack.

My modest innovation, spawned by desperation, does not come close to the blazing insight that led to the creation of Amazon, the iPhone or wrinkle-free pants. Yet psychologist Evangelia G. Chrysikou tells us we can find inspiration by dropping our internal filters and rethinking the uses of everyday objects. Turn to “Your Creative Brain at Work,” on page 24, to garner more tips.

With your brain buzzing with ideas, collect your next performance boost from an unexpected source—simply being kind. In “When Nice Guys Finish First,” on page 62, psychologist Daisy Grewal explains that being a good egg helps you gain allies at work and, more important, lets you enjoy life more than the curmudgeons do. (Not that these nice folks would ever gloat about it.)

Even the grim reaper can hoist us closer to mental magnificence. In “Mortal Thoughts,” on page 54, psychologist Michael W. Wiederman explores how acknowledging our inevitable demise can shift our personal values from material goals to idealistic pursuits, encouraging us to focus on the facets of life that are most rewarding.

Abandoning material concerns—such as the desire for a functional bathroom—was a winning strategy for me. In short, I moved. May you also find simple tweaks that allow your mind to soar to creative heights.


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  1. 1. GG 09:28 AM 6/8/12

    Or you could have just asked the landlord to fix the bathroom. Ta-dah!

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