Thinking outside the box also requires the ability to experience things outside the box, which implies understanding the needs and usability of something unusual for the majority of people to reason about. The majority of us just find something useful when it gets completely built and available, which implies an imposed delay in the internal thinking process we use for promoting innovation and innovative ideas. Getting out of our comfort zone, wearing the shoes of others, or just walking around and observing life from a neutral perspective may help in triggering the interest of thinking outside the box. It’s not an easy thing to do but it’s (for sure) a beneficial one. Let’s do it consciously and meaningfully, taking the most advantage of our ideas in order to help solving and dealing with any issue we’ve at hand in the present moment.
During our daily activities we need to think about complementing our technical skills with additional knowledge we can use to mould how we approach an issue before us, learning and finding out the strengths and weaknesses we can use to deal with it properly. Using the good-vibes version of the philosophy known as the Keep It Super Simple (KISS) principle helps us to pay attention to the essential required to deal with something, cutting off additional complexity or things that would not be required for the specific moment we’re experiencing.
The more we exercise our intrinsic ability to think outside the box, the better we understand how to see what cannot be seen out of consciousness.
Namaste 💓💓💓💓💓💓💓
Written by Jeferson Souza (thejefecomp).
Available also in a signed pdf version: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1I5WLypdKYsC65VnOTneVNKE5OC0fbLIw/view?usp=sharing
