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Nick Simard

🚢Ship 30 for 30

3y ago

Remote-working, techy dad of 3 who’s got ADHD. Wordsmith extraordinaire with a creative flair.

How Constraints Can Breed Creativity
by Nick Simard

It sounds counter-intuitive right? How can placing limitations on yourself help to make you more creative?

A Recent Example

This week, I wrote an atomic essay called The LMNOP Framework for Finding Writing Ideas. Why LMNOP? It was arbitrary. I chose 5 letters that sounded good (ellem-enno-pee) then found words that started with each letter.

The truth about that essay? It wasn't particularly hard for me to come up with. Naming, alliteration, puns, play on words, it's a gift curse I have. It's fun for me. It was an hour or less from concept to completion.

Constraints As a Forcing Function

This is a term that we're taught in Ship 30 for 30.

A forcing function is any task, activity or event that forces one to take action and produce a result. Source: Wikipedia.

The 3 Ps. The HIJK Technique. The 24/7 Approach. The JASON System (July, August, September, October, November). The 25/50/100 Strategy. The HAHA Joke-Writing Format.

Just make it up using artificial constraints. That's all anyone is doing when they create frameworks/systems. Heck, take one of the examples above and run with it (but just know that I may also).

Atomic Essays As a Constraint

We're encouraged to limit atomic essays to 250-300 words, a constraint that can lead to creativity. It forces conciseness, and changes how you structure ideas in order to make them complete, yet easily digestible.

I could easily have droned on and on about this topic, in the hopes of making it long enough that it seemed like a worthwhile read. But honestly, this right here is the perfect time to stop writing.

Give yourself some constraints and see if it can help you be more creative!

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