THROUGH
THE LENS OF CREATIVITY AND HOPE
For the last year's words
belong to last year's language and next year's words await another voice.
--- T.S. Eliot
The natural world is a
paradox of predictability and chaos. So many events happen in clockwise
fashion, while others do not. Hurricanes, tsunamis, fire, lightning, weeds,
plagues and storms are as much part of life as the predictable rising of the
sun and moon. However, these chaotic events in nature are not static. Just like
the challenges in our personal and collective lives, they come and go at
seemingly random times. What we need is hope and creativity to sustain
ourselves during a barrage of crises.
Any creative act, whether
it is successful or not, will lead to a flood of dopamine, the feel- good
chemical in your brain and that will lead to a sense of happiness and
accomplishment. The Vedas, the ancient texts, celebrate life, offering a sense
of optimism and hope; they in fact, negate negation and pessimism. Like rain on
a drought- ridden desert, hope refreshes your life and brings you lasting
peace. So, pick up one thing that interests you, or inspires and motivates you
as creativity allows us the time to go deeper in ourselves to our core and
results in human reflection.
Epidemics and pandemics
have ravaged humanity throughout it's existence and have doomed whole
civilisations and brought once powerful nations to their knees, killing
millions. Around 430 B.C. not long after a war between Athens and Sparta began,
an epidemic ravaged the people of Athens and lasted for five years. The Black
Death travelled from Asia to Europe. Plague tore through Shakespeare’s London
in what, until recently, felt like a pestilence- ridden era. That plague
decimated the capital's population with recurrent outbreaks bringing with it
the kind of draconian measures with which we've become familiar in 2020.
Perhaps the best- known examples of plagues ever recorded are those referred to
in the religious scriptures that serve as foundations to Abrahamic religions.
Book of Exodus of the Old Testament mentions a series of ten plagues to strike
the Egyptians before the Israelites, held in captivity by the Pharaoh, the
ruler of Egypt, are finally released.
William Shakespeare wrote
supposedly some of the greatest works while quarantined during the plague in
the 1500s. It is believed that the Bard not only wrote King Lear during endemic
of 1564, but also got a head start on Macbeth and Antony and Cleopatra. John
Dryden also kept his creativity alive during frequent lockdowns. On the
opposite end of the creativity spectrum, mathematician and physicist Sir Issac
Newton's work in the late 1660s, while he was quarantined at home on account of
the bubonic plague, is considered to be his best. During this period, he also
discovered differential and integral calculus, formulating a theory of universal
gravitation, and explored optics, experimenting with prisms and investigating
light (as per a report of Hindustan Times). In fact, when death hovers over the
heads of ordinary people, they suffer from the feelings of fear, sadness,
worry, numbness or frustration; they can't think beyond a certain limit, but
creative souls thrive in the company of lurking death. Death acts like a
cerebral catalyst in their case.
Creativity is marked by
heightened emotional sensitivity and creative people are not afraid to be seen
as different or exhibiting unusual thoughts. Creative individuals tend to be
independent and nonconformist in their thoughts and actions. Many creative
people show an interest in apparent disorder, contradiction and imbalance. As
playwright George Bernard Shaw sums it up," Some men see things as they
are and say 'why'? I dream of things that never were and say 'why not'."
Dreams and imagination are of the utmost significance.
Albert Einstein has been
called the most creative genius of the last century who learned how to analyse
creative ideas and examine them in his mind because he didn't have a laboratory
to test the ideas. You might not be an
Einstein and might not discover the theory for relativity but you can learn
from his creative thinking techniques. “Imagination is more important than
knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world"-- these
words of Einstein do not disrespect knowledge but point out that the way to
move into the unknown is based more on imagination than it is on knowledge. Too
often knowledge will tell you that " it can't be done", but only
imagination will find and open doors that you had ignored.
Dr. Ranjana Sharan Sinha
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