Write It Down!

So Many Journals

According to what I’ve read and experienced, people who write down their goals have a greater chance of reaching them. I believe the same holds true for people who write down their creative thoughts and ideas. The chance of discovering creative solutions that work successfully increases significantly.

Creative ideas are fleeting gifts. The question isn’t whether you have them (everyone does), but whether you take these gifts seriously and record them. Since we never know where or when they’ll strike us (walking, sleeping, shaving…), it’s important to be prepared at all times.

A few months back, while taking a shower, I was struck by a childhood event that involved a broken plastic baseball bat. It came out of left field (no pun intended) and started connecting to a plethora of today’s so called “problems.”

Within moments it grew beyond control and crystallized in my brain. By the time I finished showering, dried off, put on some clothes and found my notebook, many fragments had already disappeared. I wrote down what I could remember and over the next few weeks filled in the missing pieces.

The result? My new book, The Pink Bat: Turning Problems Into Solutions, is scheduled for release this fall. If I hadn’t taken the time to write down those fragments at that moment, the ideas for this book would have vanished.

I’ve carried notebooks (journals, sketchbooks, etc.) for nearly twenty years. Recently I’ve begun to realize these rough and random ideas truly are fleeting gifts. Some people accept them—most people don’t. They take them for granted, think they’ll return, or simply ignore them. Rarely do they return—and they never appear the same way twice.

I’ve lost countless ideas these ways myself. But I’m learning!

Another Journal

According to history, Beethoven carried a small notebook with him at all times. He’d fill the pages with rough ideas and then put it away and start a new one. After a month or so, he’d revisit the old one and if anything struck him he would refine it and transfer it to a second notebook. By the time his ideas reached the third notebook, they were well on the way to becoming a sonata.

Consider Leonardo da Vinci, Darwin, Beethoven, Dylan, Edison, Jefferson, Einstein, Matisse, Van Gogh, Hemingway… the list of famous notebook carriers is long. It seems people who have created something new or made significant contributions to business, society, science or art, have something in common—they all write down their ideas.

I’ve often wondered, “Is it because they were brilliant that they wrote down their ideas?” or “Did the act of writing down their ideas contribute to their brilliance?”

Comments

4 Responses to “Write It Down!”

  1. Mike O'Mary on October 3rd, 2009 10:55 pm

    I agree with you, Mike — write it down. Ideas that may make no sense to you today or that don’t seem to “fit” anywhere right now can turn out to be exactly the right idea you need years later. If you right it down, it’s not only a reminder about that idea, you will also begin to subconsiously think about where that idea might fit.

  2. Mike O'Mary on October 3rd, 2009 10:59 pm

    I meant “write” it down, not “right”! No wonder my high school English teacher questioned my plans to be a “righter.” As for misspelling subconsciously, no excuse!

  3. M&M on November 28th, 2010 10:17 pm

    The Holy Bible – Habakkuk 2:2
    The Lord said: “Write down the revelation and make it plain on tablets” or in this day and age, use paper!

  4. Cynthia Morris on May 25th, 2011 9:17 am

    So true! It’s weird how the goals seem to magically happen by writing them down.

    For my creative ideas, I’ve learned to jot two sentences or scraps of the idea rather than one. One often leaves me wondering what I meant, while two helps me remember the idea and where I want to take it.

    Thanks for this great post, and for sharing Beethoven’s process with us!

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