Are you a creator if you make coffee in the morning?

If so what did you create? 

A product? Maybe a simple cup of coffee, using your coffee pot, grounds, and filter?  Maybe an elaborate cappuccino from a shiny machine?
An experience?
Perhaps contentment as you linger at your favorite coffee shop reading the paper?  Or maybe comfort as you sip the warm brew while leisurely checking your email. Or maybe stress, as you absentmindedly drink, answering your cell phone and driving to work?

If your life is composed of a million such creations, what do they add up to?

Is there one thing  you create on a regular basis that you could change to bring more of what you want into your life?

After all, if you are not the creator of your life, who is? And what you get may just start with how you do coffee in the morning!Smile

Just Start: Take Action, Embrace Uncertainty, Create the Future

I am fascinated with the creating processHere’s a new book that I believe makes a major contribution to describing the creating process.

Just Start: Take Action, Embrace Uncertainty, Create the Future
Leonard A. Schlesinger
(Author), Charles F. Kiefer (Author), Paul B. Brown (Contributor)

Today more and more of what we do involves navigating in unknown territory. Traditional planning processes that assume a predictable environment are ill suited  for what we encounter when trying something new or just living in this rapidly changing world. Based on studies and interviews with entrepreneurs, the authors conclude that the creActive process (their term) involves basically three steps.

“1. Desire. Find or think of something you want. …you don’t need a lot of passion; you only need sufficient desire to get started….

2. Take a smart step as quickly as you can. As you will see, a smart step has its own three-part logic as well.

  • Act quickly with the means at hand—i.e. what you know, who you know, and anything else that’s available.
  •  Stay within your acceptable loss. Make sure the cost of that smart step (in terms of time, money, reputation, and so on) is never more than you are willing to lose should things not work out.
  • Bring others along to acquire more resources; spread the risk, and confirm the quality of your idea.

3. Build on what you have learned from taking that step.”

( from Chapter One: What to Do When You Can’t Predict the Future)

If this feels familiar it may be because it is something we’ve all done. Understanding everything involved in the steps is still a challenge. You can order the book  by clicking here: Just Start: Take Action, Embrace Uncertainty, Create the Future

Missing Manual

Welcome to CreatingWorks!

I was created to be a creator but it
is only over time I’m learning the rules
of how this creating stuff really works.
Was it God’s sense of adventure or
sense of humor I wonder that led to
the omission of the Owner’s Manual?