Ideas Come in Motion
Lenox Riley Lohr, former president of the National Broadcasting Company, discovered a counterintuitive truth about creativity: our best ideas rarely arrive when we're intensely focused on a problem. "Ideas, I find, come most readily when you are doing something that keeps the mind alert without putting too much strain upon it," Lohr explained in American Magazine. The sweet spot for inspiration exists in those moments of gentle mental engagement—while shaving, driving, sawing wood, or during outdoor pursuits like fishing or hunting. Even casual conversation creates this fertile mental state. "Some of my best ideas," Lohr noted, "came from information picked up casually and entirely unrelated to my work." The mind, it seems, needs space to make unexpected connections, finding solutions precisely when we're not desperately searching for them.