By Tanner Christensen
Being a naive child means learning how the world
works (or doesn’t work) is as easy as trying something, making mistakes, and
adapting.
But as the child grows up, he or she comes to be
an expert on how to live within the bounds of what becomes known; to do so
ensures a general happy and healthy life. You don’t have to look very far to
see how this transformation occurs, how we each go from naive toddler to
knowledgable youth then finally into experts as adulthood.
An empty box becomes a way to efficiently move a
lot of stuff. A sheet of paper becomes a canvas for capturing notes or
drawings. A bowl is a convenient container of food, while a cup is an optimal
way of transferring liquids. If I put a spoon in front of you, you’d likely be
able to tell me exactly what it’s for, but struggle to come up with things it’s
explicitly not for.
Often the cost of experience is imagination. We
trade one for the other.
To the naive child, an empty box is anything they
can imagine it to be: a space shuttle, a race car, a store front, a home, a
giant shoe, you name it. A sheet of paper isn’t merely a canvas, it’s a
yet-to-be-folded airplane, or boat, or hat. A bowl is a drum, or a helmet, or
wheel, and a cup is a magnifying glass or secret agent speaker phone. A spoon
to a toddler is a guitar, a boomerang, a drumstick, a mirror, or any number of
other things.
As we grow and become experts in life and work,
it becomes more and more difficult to see around what we (or society) expect
things to be. As a result, experts are only good at what’s proven. Creativity
comes secondary to what we already know and believe. It’s difficult to be
anything but the expert after so long, because you can’t forget what you’ve
learned. We don’t grow up to become more child-like.
Yet to remain creative, we must learn to be an
expert while maintaining a child-like spirit. We must learn about optimization
and efficiency, but remain curious about why they matter.
Tanner Christensen is a Product designer at Facebook, author of The Creativity Challenge, founder of Creative Something, developer of some of the top creativity apps, contributing author for Inc, former writer for Adobe's 99u. Living in the San Francisco bay area, California.