Hijack Your Subconscious Mind
“It is a common experience that a problem difficult at night is resolved in the morning after the committee of sleep has worked on it.”
— John Steinbeck
Many scientists, artists, and inventors have leveraged the power of the subconscious during sleep. Nobel Laureate Otto Loewi traced the design of the experiment that would win him the Nobel Prize in a dream (two, actually!).
I wonder at how little use we make of the subconscious. After all, the plain fact is that Steinbeck’s “committee of sleep” meets nightly! Why not make full use of its power?
I’ve found there’s immense power in simply seeding the subconscious by deliberately and intentionally bringing to mind a problem I’m struggling with before going to bed. Not to solve it directly, but to prime my subconscious.
Reid Hoffman, founder of LinkedIn and member of the “Paypal Mafia,” says, “I never go to sleep without giving my subconscious a problem to solve.” Tim Ferriss describes how Hoffman will journal on the problem first thing in the morning, before checking email, text messages, etc.
It’s a simple way to hijack the natural rhythms of our days, and tap into to an unexpected repository of creative energy.
The committee of sleep is meeting again tonight… why not put something on the agenda?
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One of the defining contributions the d.school is helping teams ask themselves, “What kind of thinking is appropriate, when?” We call such clarity being “Mindful of Process.” And it can seem like semantics until you realize we need to show up in different ways.