Channel Button

There are 5 articles on this title. You are reading the article ranked and rated #5 by Helium's members.

Business   >

Entrepreneurial Spirit

Get a Widget for this title

Thinking outside of the box: Strategies for getting out your own way

"Thinking outside the box" is one of those phrases we hear all of the time nowadays yet fail to ever stop and ask ourselves just what the hell it is supposed to mean. What does it mean to think outside the box? What is thought outside the box like? How does one learn to think outside the box?

A highly developed and well fed imagination is an absolute prerequisite to any serious thought outside the box. One might say it all comes down to the imaginative question, "What if?" Ask it habitually because this question is more important than any other when it comes to creativity. It is all the stimulant an author, student, businessman, artist, etc. needs to begin climbing out of that stifling, stale, and musty old box. "Imagination is intelligence having fun", said the great humorist, George Sciala. Ask any great thinker and he'll tell you that when he is on a roll his work is extremely enjoyable, fun. He's thinking outside the box.

Thinking outside the box involves seeing what is logically illogical. It's to perceive something in a brand new way. It involves juggling about the diverse elements of a problem, seeing all sides of an issue, and realigning this diversity into new and unexplored relationships. It is surprising, delightful, often hilarious, always enlightening.

If thinking outside the box is so wonderful, why don't more people do it? A few talented persons practically live outside the box. The vast majority, however, remain trapped inside. Why? We tend to get in our own way. Thinking outside the box involves a sort of sleight of mind sidestepping dance around the censor, a transcendence of everyday self-criticism. It's a great talent to have but not something we'd want to be doing all of the time. Our critical faculties have a definite evolutionary function. They're there to protect us from making silly mistakes. They keep us from reaching out, say, to touch that giant tarantula over there in the campfire flames. Nevertheless, the ability to short circuit these faculties is a great gift, well worth cultivating.

There are countless ways to develop this sleight of mind skill. Here's some advice for starters. Don't be uptight, anxious, or otherwise inhibited. Roll up your sleeves, take off your choke collar, let down your hair, have a drink even. Do whatever it takes to relax yourself. The corporate conference table is an uptight place. Take it to the park, a picnic table, the nearest pub, somewhere mellow.

Once you've found an appropriate milieu, here's a handful


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Thinking outside of the box: Strategies for getting out your own way

  • 1 of 5

    by Bob Schmidt

    A great strategy for thinking "outside of the box" is to try to ignore the programming that structures your way of thinking

    read more

  • 2 of 5

    by Rhonda Day

    WHAT WOULD YOU NEVER DO?

    For years we have heard the term "think outside the box" but have we lost the true meaning of the

    read more

  • 3 of 5

    by Scott Orr

    "We must stop assuming that a thing which has never been done before probably cannot be done at all"
    - Donald M. Nelson

    In

    read more

  • 4 of 5

    by William Bond

    Strategies of getting out of your own way can become essential in your working life, and could be

    read more

  • 5 of 5

    by Dexie Runns Long

    "Thinking outside the box" is one of those phrases we hear all of the time nowadays yet fail to ever stop and ask ourselves

    read more

Add your voice

Know something about Thinking outside of the box: Strategies for getting out your own way?
We want to hear your view. Write_penWrite now!

Helium Debate

Cast your vote!

Will Obama's health care plan help or hurt entrepreneurs?

Click for your side.

136398

Featured Partner

Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting

The Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting is an innovator in international nonprofit journalism. It goes beyond the hea...more

What is Helium? | Buy Web Content | Contact Us | Privacy | User agreement | DMCA | User Tools | Help | Community | Helium’s Official Blog | Link to Helium

Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA