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Inspiration Reservoir

This week’s trek is inspired by creativity guru, Julia Cameron. In her book, The Artist's Way, she proposes a playful approach to tapping into your greatest sources of inspiration to unlock creativity.

Want to fire up your imagination?

Cameron talks a lot about the importance of inducing your own sense of wonder to unlock creativity. By indulging in the places, sensations, and traditions that intrigue us, we can tap into new ideas and sources of inspiration. 

Introducing Your Inspiration Reservoir Exercise

What It Is
A date with your imagination to tap into your main sources of inspiration and bring about new ideas.

Why We Love It 
This exercise gets your creative juices flowing in a fun and playful way that is reminiscent of your primary school arts and crafts days. Oh, don't worry, we know your five-year-old self can't wait to wolf down a pint of paste....

How It Works

1. Take 10 minutes to consider the following 10 questions:

- What culture other than your own speaks to you?
- What age other than the one we're in resonates with your sensibilities?
- What foreign cuisine feels like home on your palate?
- What exotic smells give you a sense of expansion and well-being?
- What aspects of nature intrigue you?
- What spiritual tradition intrigues you beyond your own?
- What music from another culture plucks your heart strings?
- In another time period, what physical age do you see yourself being?
- In another culture or time, what is your gender?
- If you were to write a film, what age and time, what place and predicament, would you choose to explore?

2. Build a Pinterest board (here's how mine is coming along if you want a sneak peek) with images that correspond to your answers to each of the questions in #1 above. As you build the board, what themes, ideas and feelings arise?

Want to go deeper?
  • To learn more about what's going on in your brain when you feel inspired, check this out.
  • For a look at the creative rituals of some of the greatest minds, read this.
  • For some fun infographics on the daily patterns of famous creatives, read this.
Have a favorite trek? 
Hit us up at treks@lifetrekkers.me and tell us which one you liked and what you learned!
Here's what your fellow trekkers have to say about past treks:
 
"Listen Up was one of my favorite treks. It helped me rethink how I engage in conversations and understand what it really takes to actively listen."
- Shankar Desai, Group Manager @ Google
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Copyright © 2018 LifeTrekkers, All rights reserved.

Want more information? Drop us a line at info@trekkers.me.

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Shankar Desai
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Your Innate Interests

This week’s trek is based on HBS Senior Fellow Timothy Butler’s research on how to find new career paths that align with your passions.

Feeling a bit bored with your career?

Butler refers to these moments as impasses. These are times when we might have a "feeling that over a stretch of time (beyond a few months) we aren’t growing, we aren’t learning, or we aren’t doing things that seem satisfying" in our careers. 

Butler views impasses as a normal part of career development, not a sign that you've done something wrong. Instead, he says to think of these moments as a trigger to evaluate your interests and how they can be better represented in the next natural evolution of your career. 

Introducing Your Innate Interests Exercise

What It Is
An honest look at your innate interests to figure out how much love they're getting in your current line of work.

Why We Love It 
Sometimes it’s hard to sort out our deeply embedded life interests, or passions, when so much of our focus in on what we currently do or what we know about. This exercise gives us a way to compare ten broad interest areas outside of the context of job responsibilities so we can start to identify the interests, activities and modes of thinking that best align with our passions.

How It Works

1. Review these Ten Basic Interests categories and select the three that best represent your passions. The goal is not to pick the top three that best represent your current line of work or what you are told you are great at. Instead, focus on selecting those you are naturally drawn to and that give you energy or inspire you.

2. Once you’ve picked your top three, think through a moment in your personal or professional life where these interests were present. What were you doing? How did you feel?

3. Now consider which interests haven’t been present at all. How might you be able to uncover more of these interests in your current line of work or your next career move?

Looking to have a personal jam session on this topic?
Have a favorite trek? 
Hit us up at treks@lifetrekkers.me and tell us which one you liked and what you learned!
Here's what your fellow trekkers have to say about past treks:
 
"The creative recovery exercise was one of my favorites. This exercise helped me push past my creative blocks. I love using it to clear my mind and reflect by rereading it at the end of the week."
- Dama Dipayana, Founder Be Frank
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Copyright © 2018 LifeTrekkers, All rights reserved.

Want more information? Drop us a line at info@trekkers.me.

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You can unsubscribe from this list.
Shankar Desai
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Embracing Your Dark Side

This week's trek is inspired by Debbie Ford's work on exploring your weaknesses in order to better understand yourself.

Are there things about yourself that you'd prefer to keep in the dark?

Rooted in Jung's concept of the Shadow, Ford would argue that running away from the worst parts of yourself only allows them to manifest further. Instead, she says it's important to own your dark qualities and understand how they contribute to your behaviors and viewpoints of the world.
 

Introducing Your Dark Side Exercise*

What It Is
An opportunity to explore the things about yourself that aren't so pleasant in order to increase your self-awareness.

Why We Love It 
Knowing ourselves isn't solely about creating a laundry list of all the things that make you so great (re: your dating profile one-liners). It's also about understanding the things about yourself that you might be afraid to openly acknowledge (at least until the third or fourth date).

How It Works

1. Set aside 10-20 minutes and grab your favorite journal. 

2. Imagine that an article was written about you in your favorite magazine or newspaper. Write down the five things you would not want this article to say about you. These are things that are true about you, but you'd really prefer to not share with the entire world. Then, write down the five things the article could say about you that you'd be fine with. 

3. Revisit your first list (the "I don't want the world to know this" list). Ask yourself why these five things are something you'd prefer to keep hidden. Is it because your family, friends and social circles would tell you they're unfavorable qualities? Or is it because you fundamentally believe they aren't good qualities? Take a look at your second list. Are these qualities things you believe others would perceive as good? Do you fundamentally agree?

4. Let's go back to that first list. Ask yourself when each of these five qualities have been helpful to you. Write down specific examples for each one. Try to examine the situations where each quality can be beneficial to you and compare it to situations where it truly has not been helpful to you or others. What are the differences in these scenarios? How can you embrace more of this dark side of yourself in scenarios where there's benefit? How can you have more of an open mind about this same dark quality when you see it in others?

*Source: The Dark Side of the Light Chasers

Want to dig deeper into this topic?
Shout. It. Back. To treks@lifetrekkers.me if you have praise or gripes about this trek or random thoughts about Life Trekkers.
Here's what your fellow trekkers have to say about past treks:
 
"The 'mindful meals' trek was one of my favorites. It started with one meal, but I've found myself focusing more intently on almost everything I've eaten since."
Ev Boyle, Director @ LA-Tech.org
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Copyright © 2018 LifeTrekkers, All rights reserved.

Want more information? Drop us a line at info@trekkers.me.

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You can unsubscribe from this list.
Shankar Desai