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Posted On 09.06.10

This is an article by Jocelyn K. Glei and I think it describes that high we get when on the hunt, shopping, “seeking.” We want to feel as if we’re on to something; as if we’re accomplishing something. But in that, we never actually DO anything but hunt and consume. We need to transform the seek and consume mantra into “seek to produce.”

“Have you ever fallen into a black hole of comparison shopping? You’re looking for a new digital camera, for instance. You head over to Cnet.com and read some reviews of various cameras, watch the video demos, identify the model you want. Then perhaps you employ Google’s shopping search to price out the options and find the best deal. All of the sudden, it’s four hours later. You’ve found the perfect camera, but your purchasing triumph is tainted by a creeping feeling of, well, disgust. Couldn’t that time have been used better?I was thinking recently about what my biggest distractions were – the things keeping me from pushing my creative projects forward. As I scanned through my daily activities, I found that the most insidious distraction was, in fact, things. More specifically, the wanting, hunting, and getting of things – whether they be tangible (a new computer) or intangible (information).

As Annie Leonard says in The Story of Stuff, “Our primary identity has become that of being consumers – not mothers, teachers, or farmers, but of consumers. We shop and shop and shop.” We love our stuff. Yet more than the stuff itself, we love the act of finding it – the search, the anticipation.

But why is consumerism – and particularly, an online hunt for the ideal purchase – so addictive?

It turns out that our consumerist impulse stimulates the same part of the brain that fires when we’re on the trail of a great idea. As we go through the trial and error of executing an idea – What if I tried this? Ah! Now what about this? – we’re using those same wanting, hunting, getting instincts but in a nobler pursuit.

Neuroscientist Jaak Panksepp calls this highly addictive emotional state “seeking.” In a Slate article on seeking, writer Emily Yoffe sums up his research:

“For humans, this desire to search is not just about fulfilling our physical needs. Panksepp says that humans can get just as excited about abstract rewards as tangible ones. He says that when we get thrilled about the world of ideas, about making intellectual connections, about divining meaning, it is the seeking circuits that are firing.

The juice that fuels the seeking system is the neurotransmitter dopamine. The dopamine circuits ‘promote states of eagerness and directed purpose,’ Panksepp writes. It’s a state humans love to be in. So good does it feel that we seek out activities, or substances, that keep this system aroused.”

The consumerist search capitalizes on the same “seeking” part of the brain that fuels the creative rush. Of course, while consumerism can serve as an addictive substitute for the stimulation of creative activity, it offers nowhere near the same reward in the long term.

As creatives, we can often rationalize spending time on shopping by telling ourselves that we’re investing our time, energy, and money in a new tool – an item that’s going to catapult our creativity to the next level. Maybe it’s a new computer, maybe it’s a musical instrument, maybe it’s a studio of one’s own. Once you get that new thing, you think, you’ll have a superior means to complete your work.

It’s a false promise, of course. A means of procrastination baked into our consumerist culture. No external thing can prompt creativity, and there’s no substitute for just getting down to doing the work. In fact, it’s been proven that hardship – being deprived of things – stimulates creativity more than being well-off. A recent Newsweek article on America’s declining creativity reported:

“Highly creative adults frequently grew up with hardship. Hardship by itself doesn’t lead to creativity, but it does force kids to become more flexible—and flexibility helps with creativity.”

When we have less to work with, we have to be more creative. Think about that the next time the consumerist impulse is threatening to encroach on your creativity.”

Thoughts?

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Comments

09.07.10

"As creatives, we can often rationalize spending time on shopping by telling ourselves that we’re investing our time, energy, and money in a new tool – an item that’s going to catapult our creativity to the next level."

I can definitely see the truth behind that statement. I have a lot of creative friends and the behavior is there. It's not just that, either, I believe. It's that when creatives earn a certain level of income and are a part of a quickly changing consumer culture (with new product lines every year), they are inclined to "keep up" with the fashion/technology or risk becoming "irrelevant".

09.07.10

This is a great article. I think that the whole "hunt" thing is used at times when creative people are not feeling creative at all. It becomes kind of an escape and often the only time of the day we feel like we have accomplished something. It's kind of a big lie.

 

 

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09.07.10

@Leslie - Yeah, definitely not only with creatives. It seems to be an accepted thing at a certain level of society to change what you own by the changing of the seasons, years, etc. It's ridiculous really. People changing out stuff as expensive as vehicles every two years just because they can. We should all sit down and run the numbers on how wasteful that is over the course of a lifetime.

@Valerie - Valerie, yes! It's like when I don't want to write an article and I sit there and refresh my Facebook 30 times in a 5 minute period. I'm looking for an escape route instead of just doing what I need to do.

09.07.10

Actually I say NO! Because being creative should not inhibit any activity. As a Professional Travel Consultant I have the opportunity to plan some of the most creative trips for my clients. Hands on personal service they cannot get from ANY giant online booking engine! Try booking a multi-segment trip on ANY of them! It simply does not work! My personal knowledge of 133 destinations, little things like quaint restaurants, wonderful places that are 'offr the grid' that BIG impersonal booking engines cannot spend time or money to tell clients about them. Creativity should never limit anyone in any part of their life! If it does, you are not 'living' your are only 'existing'.
JESS Kalinowsky
Professional Travel Consultant

09.07.10

@Jess - It seems like you are just trying to market yourself using Brazen. If not, you seemed to misunderstand the post completely. It has nothing to do with creativity inhibiting the activity, but the activity taking time and effort away from creativity, which is the exact opposite.

Again, not sure if you are a spammer, but your comment reads that way.

09.07.10

Sorry if feel I am a "spammer". I find your comment insulting!!!
You had sometin in an open medium, you asked, and answered your own question. I felt my comments were appropriate. Do not ask questions in a open forum if you do not want people to respond.

YES! Indeed, just like you, I am marketing myself. When one writes something on the internet, it is marketing themselves.

That is the nature of the beast I am affraid!

If you do not care for feedback, then do not ask requestions that 'appear' to be looking for feedback!

I am too much of a Gentleman to insult you, and do not appreciate you personally attacking me and insulting me!

"Spammer" I am NOT! If you do not like my feedback, I am truly sorry.
BUT I strongly feel I have the right to my opinion.

09.07.10

Jess, if you are that concerned with expressing your opinion and marketing yourself, (which I would argue is more the purpose of your own posts, not your thoughts on someone else's), I would at least suggest you 1.) Calm down a bit in doing so. 2)Take the time to look up the spelling of the words you use to do so.

Bianne said you comment "reads" like spam, and given how it looks, (sloppy and self serving) I have to concur.

I'd like to also point out that writing something on the internet is not, de facto, marketing one's self. It certainly can be, and often is, but there are plenty of other reasons to do so. If that is your personal goal for writing on the internet, so be it. But you may want to consider the fact that many people, particularly in this network, do not respond well to someone who's only motivation for commenting, blogging, or Twittering is total self promotion.

Finally, I will have to agree with the notion that you do not seem to have grasped the nature of the post. I think you should read it again, and then read your comments again in light of what I said, and see if perhaps there wasn't a better way to make your point.

09.07.10

Wow. Ty, thanks for your input. I'm not going to comment on his posts anymore for obvious reasons.

09.07.10

OK! WORKS for me. Sorry if I misspelled words! Shame on me! Spank Spank!

Apparently "Freedom of Speech" [The First Amendment] does not apply????

Sorry I stepped on your toes. Sorry your misunderstood my comments.

Oh Well!

"You can please some of the people some of the time all of the people some of the time some of the people all of the time but you can never please all of the people all of the time?"

Abraham Lincoln

09.07.10

I normally wouldn't bother, but I just have to this time.

1) The First Amendment refers to the powers of the government. The government doesn't run this site. Furthermore, your freedom to express yourself isn't being denied by those who run Brazen. (Not yet anyway.) It just isn't being appreciated, because it lacks substance.

2) The actual quotation is, "You can FOOL some of the people some of the time..."

3) There is no proof that Lincoln ever said it.

The last thing I will ever say to you, (because your entertainment value, though high, has now waned) is to think about how poorly your marketing for your self is going to look when people consider numbers 1,2, and 3 of my list above.

Not to mention your use of the argument, "spank, spank".

It, quite honestly has been fun watching you implode and lose credibility. And I thank Brianne for letting me indulge one more time in this thread.

09.07.10

OK

you win!

LOL!!!!!!

cdancshazy
09.07.10

Excellent post, Brianne. Wholeheartedly agree with the premise of the title. My only addition is along the lines of: this 'natural' response and feedback loop is also carefully targeted, fostered, indoctrinated, glorified, etc. by those who sell us the 'stuff', and those whose business model depends on the economy/society created by consumerism. Which, if you think about it, can get to be a pretty BIG circle... The first two parts of 'Century of the Self' are highly enlightening in terms of the origins and development of consumerism.

10.18.10

Great post. I have most definitely felt that 'thrill of the hunt' many times before. Once it is over there is always a creeping feeling that I could have spent that time doing something else ie - something creative.

 

 

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