CAN DOING NOTHING KINDLE CREATIVITY?
“Doing nothing
is better than being busy doing nothing.” ~Lao Tzu
Recently I read
an article written by a very good friend of mine, Dr Akanksha Jaiswal titled
“The Importance of Doing Nothing” that was published in the Open Page segment
of The Hindu Newspaper, Chennai. When I read it once, I smiled, congratulated
her, and kept it aside just like reading any other article on my phone. I read
it again and it made me think. So, thank you dear Akanksha that your small
piece of thought made me think!
As a woman myself,
I do have that great quality to juggle things and multitask every single day.
Getting up early in the morning, welcoming the morning sun, cutting vegetables
while concurrently sipping a cup of tea, with a four-burner stove keeping all
the burners burning together, think of an interesting breakfast that would kick
start the day, take shower, and get ready for the University, do morning
prayers, eat something, and reach on time. Heave a sigh of relief and start
waving Hello! and responding to several Good mornings from colleagues!
This kind of
routine has been there for many years, not just in Ujjain, but also during my
stint in Mumbai. In fact, it had an additional touch of a daily to-and-fro
travel of four hours in a local train. Cherry on cake! I remember my times on
the local train in Mumbai. The everyday struggle to get a seat for the long
journey, witnessing the wacky fights (which I later realised were basic
conversations), to over-hearing the sad stories of so many women in the ladies’
coach, to women selling artificial jewellery, to so many more things happening
around continuously. Just unstoppable. I learnt a lot from everything I
observed. The women selling socks or jewellery, or table covers or bindis were
all hard-working women. They were living a respectful life by working hard and
making ends meet out of the money earned every single day. I saw them every day
doing the same thing. Anyway, life is life! I felt why not make my local train
journey into ‘me time’.
Being a
creative person, my friends and relatives know very well, that if I am not
working in the office, then I am doing or thinking about something or the
other. For example, I am listening to music or singing, writing, reading,
watching a movie for academic interest or sometimes for pure entertainment,
going for a walk, gardening, or trying out new recipes. During my initial days
in Mumbai when I was figuring out my existence and survival, adjusting to time,
space, and behaviours, I did not know much and just worked on my PhD Coursework,
Teaching and Research. Eventually, I realised that now I was a seasoned
Mumbaikar (dealing with all sorts of things, that is what one starts
believing), I asked myself how do I make good use of my almost four hours; for
five days a week? I wanted to cut myself off from the quotidian of seeing
slums, spinach, and fenugreek farms exactly next to the naalas, feeling the
humidity and getting tired of sweating and pushing yourself every day to walk
down Azad Maidan. By and large, I had enough reasons to be pensive and
dejected. I started listening to music and doing more mental riyaaz. I also
started reading second-hand books as they smelled old, yellow, and light. I did
enjoy ‘me time’ and cut off myself from the hustle-bustle and jerks of the
train journey mentally. But here is the point. Maybe, some of the train trips I
should have just slept like other women did. They did not care about their
purses or bags. They just slept and some of them even snored.
Calvin and
Hobbes are one of the comic characters that I adore. One of the many strips
goes like this on doing nothing: Calvin diligently studies his calendar. Hobbes
stands beside Calvin, full of anticipation. Calvin says: “Well, let us check my
calendar and see what our schedule is for today. Today says do nothing. So,
does tomorrow and every day after…all the way through the end of August.”
Here is another
one:
Honestly, that
is exaggerated.
While writing
all this, I am still figuring out why did I even chose this subject as my first
article for Avantika University’s website blog, but I think this not just
matters to me, but to anyone reading this, especially in the times of pandemic.
Pandemic did bring with it some major lifestyle changes and most of us have
adapted to it well. After all, we are Indians! We easily adjust with the
systems, times, space, behaviours, and viruses too. Being a faculty
myself, who would take on a class alone of more than hundred upcoming designers
and engineers of Avantika University, who liked to interact with them, give an
ear to their problems, was suddenly alone in front of a camera and a screen and
took a full semester gazing at it. In fact, I am proud of all the faculty
members who not just learned and adapted the new techniques and technology in
teaching but unlearned a lot simultaneously. I remember that while I was
teaching a course called Critical and Creative Thinking to M. Des. students,
emphasising on what helps in bringing up creative ideas, I shared with them
many concepts but relevant to what this article is about were, ‘Find your
Pencil’ and ‘Sit alone’. These are some of the concepts by choreographer and
creative thinker Twyla Tharp. Tharp says to “find your pencil,” or the thing
you create with, arguing that carrying around a pencil (or paintbrush, or
camera, or whatever your tool may be) every day makes you ready to use it when
the time comes. Carry yourself with a sense of openness to ideas, so that when
you’re struck with inspiration (or called on to do a new project), you’re
already warmed up to work.” She encourages solitude by saying, “Alone is a
fact, a condition when no one else is around. Lonely is how you feel about
that.” Let your mind wander, teasing thoughts from the subconscious.
This brings me
to the end of my blog. Being a faculty myself and trying to balance out every
day with professional and personal complications, it is a must for all of us,
including students to rethink. Rather than having a robotic life, a life which
is black and white, a life that switches on and off-- we need some shades of
human, some hues of greys, some tinge of spark that fills our mind and body
with some newness, laziness, and madness. So, try out ‘doing absolutely
nothing’ in your ‘me time’ to come up with some happier skin and a clearer mind
and approach to solve the jigsaw puzzle of an ordinary day.
Dr Sanyukta Kashalkar- Karve
This article was published in the blog of Avantika University(MIT-Pune Campus), Ujjain on 26th December 2020. Article link: https://www.avantikauniversity.edu.in/blog.php?u=can-doing-nothing-kindle-creativity



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