Why You Need Your Constraints to Be Creative

Do you want to be free? To live without constraints?  Have enough money so that money doesn’t matter anymore? To be free of your work or the demands of others on your time? Do you want to be able to do anything whatsoever whenever it pleases you? Fine aims indeed. And there are thousands of people out there willing to tell you how you can do it (for a price). However, it appears to me that having a life without limits or constraints would be a very uninteresting life indeed. In fact, constraints are essential for all of us, and are what makes life interesting. For example, anyone who ever became really good at something did so because they knew about the constraints of whatever it was they were trying to excel at. Ask anyone who is at the top of their game, be it sport, music, business, art, or acting and I bet they all have intimate knowledge of the constraints that they work under. It is the masterly manipulation of these constraints that makes what these people do so much fun for them (and lucrative too).

Look at it from another angle, anything we do that’s creative is defined as such because its a creative use of materials, musical notes, shapes and/or colors - but within some form of limiting set of rules or physical realities.  We recognize music when the sounds we hear conform to strict sets of rules that determine which notes can follow previous notes; the artist must work within the constraints of the materials she uses, and the businessman must try to make his profit within the rules of commerce as defined by his society. Even people who attempt to break the rules do so in full knowledge of the rules they are trying to break - their behavior is still defined by the rules they are resisting.

I guess the point I’m trying to make is that in fact, limitations and constraints provide the framework within which we can be creative and innovative. Without them we would have nothing to work with - imagine Nureyev in zero-G, or Callas in a vacuum, or Branson in Cuba! Sure, I’d love to have enormous sums of money and no demands on my time, but I suspect if I really did ever manage to get myself into such a situation, I’d either be bored or, more likely, find a whole new set of limitations and constraints I’d have to work within.

I think there’s a lesson here. Instead of looking at constraints as bad things or even necessary evils, we should see them as opportunities for creativity. I don’t have much money, I’m not the best looking person in the world (though my Mother assures me that I am), and I’m not born with any God-given talents that will make my fortune (notwithstanding my world class ability to procrastinate), but when I look around, I see many little ways that I can tweak things to do better at what I do. Yes, I’m surrounded by limits but, like the musician faced with just 8 notes and a handful of chords, perhaps I too can create my own personal Sgt Peppers. I bet you can too!

Here’s someone who knows all about constraints…

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3 RESPONSES TO "WHY YOU NEED YOUR CONSTRAINTS TO BE CREATIVE"

jrandom42

How about this as the biggest constraint? You gotta produce SOMETHING for all your creative activity, otherwise creativity means nothing.

August 18, 2008 6:17 pm
Scott M

The is a good reason why managers should set rules and expectations and goals. If your people are spending all the time figuring out what they are supposed to do, then they won't have enough time to actually DO it.

August 18, 2008 7:32 pm
Smith+Fritzy

That's why I always take student portfolios with a grain of salt. We always asked, at any job I had, for the prospective employee to design a layout or ad in a the time constraints we normally have. Plus, in a profession where the deadline isn't your constraint, you still need these things in order to force yourself to get the job done. We all have little projects that sit around and never get done because of that.

August 18, 2008 8:46 pm

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