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Updated July 24, 2024Youโre reading an excerpt of Creative Doing, by Herbert Lui. 75 practical techniques to unlock creative potential in your work, hobby, or next career. Purchase now for instant, lifetime access to the book.
If you go to an improv comedy class, youโll see that participants are encouraged to agree to and build upon everybody elseโs ideas. Comedian, filmmaker, writer Tina Fey calls this the โRule of Agreementโ in her memoir Bossypants, describing it as a reminder to:
โRespect what your partner has createdโ and to at least start from an open-minded place. Start with a YES and see where that takes you.
So try saying yes to every prompt or idea from others, at least once. If the need arises, you are free to make modifications and to add an element of your own to the prompt. I would be extremely happy to hear that youโd augmented one of these prompts to fit you better.
When you say yes, you train your brain to let go of your preferences and expectations, and to let go of them to work with whateverโs in front of you.
The other benefit to saying yes is that it opens your mind up to chaotic, creative, energy. If you feel like you donโt have thisโlike youโre not creative, or youโre better at executing other peopleโs ideas, or that your work sucksโyouโll need to trust me on this for now. The energy may simply be dormant or latent, waiting for you to tap into it.
Chaotic energy is incredibly valuable. You could consider it to be the raw material of all creative work. One of the best explanations of this comes from Professor Betty Flowersโs response to her studentsโ woes of getting started writing, which I learned from my editor on this book, Rachel Jepsen. Flowers writes:
What happens when you get stuck is that two competing energies are locked horn to horn, pushing against each other. One is the energy of what Iโll call your โmadman.โ He is full of ideas, writes crazily and perhaps rather sloppily, gets carried away by enthusiasm or anger, and if really let loose, could turn out ten pages an hour.
The second is a kind of critical energyโwhat Iโll call the โjudge.โ Heโs been educated and knows a sentence fragment when he sees one. He peers over your shoulder and says, โThatโs trash!โ with such authority that the madman loses his crazy confidence and shrivels up. You know the judge is rightโafter all, he speaks with the voice of your most imperious English teacher. But for all his sharpness of eye, he canโt create anything.
Flowers so well articulates the innate duality of the madman and the judge that exists in all forms of creative work, between making and releasing, recording and editing, working and reworking, programming and debugging, doodling and drawing.
When each of us grows up, we learn to seek validation, approvals, and reviews for our work. We grow to depend on the critical energy from the judge, at the cost of starving the madman of the very crucial, chaotic, energy.
Itโs later in the bookโwhen youโre well used to agreeing with where your inner chaotic energy is taking you, that youโll reconnect with your opinions, taste, and discernment. As Rachel Jepsen writes, โIn order to get to unity you have to begin with chaos.โ