What Is Thinking Block and How To Overcome It
Everyone has an idea of what writer’s block is. I am familiar with this problem first hand. You sit there… staring at a blank word document and it stares back at you. Your mind tells you – “Write something!”, “Anything!” So you write some banality that starts with “Everyone needs motivation in life”. And your brain screams, “No! Delete it before someone sees it! No one wants to read THIS.” So you are back where you started – a white void, where all great ideas die, before being born.
You might not have experienced writer’s block. But I am sure that at some point you have had to deal with imagination or thinking block. Do you know that feeling – a complete brain hiccup where all of a sudden you just cannot come up with a decent answer or solution to a problem, because your mind goes blank?
Following Murphy’s Law – great spontaneous solutions rarely come to us when we are thinking intensely about them. Quite the opposite, the harder we try the more feel confused and frustrated.
Why?
As it turns out, it all has to do with the way our brain works. It can either process information in an intuitive and spontaneous way, while looking at the whole picture or it can process the data in an analytical and sequential way, looking first at the pieces then putting them together to get the whole. It all depends on which hemisphere of the brain is more engaged while thinking. After numerous experiments neurologists have found that the left hemisphere of our brain is responsible for logical thinking, while the right hemisphere is for creative and lateral thinking.
Most people use left-side thinking or think “rationally” a lot more than they use the right side of the brain. You might be wondering what is wrong with thinking rationally and relying on your analytical skills.
Nothing. Unless you over use them. Health care professionals report that left hemisphere strokes are a lot more common and more dangerous than right hemisphere strokes. It may be a signal that we work our rational mind into a blowout.
Sense versus Sensibility.
Contrary to what we would expect, relying heavily on our logical brain might not always be the best way to solve complicated problems or make the right decisions in our professional and personal life.
