How To Use MindMapping To Stay Creative & Intuitive Everyday
By guest contributor Virginia Cunningham.
Humans are by nature creative. Sometimes, however, we need a little help to unlock our true artistic potential.
Using mind mapping can not only help you get a clearer picture of your ideas, it can also encourage you to focus and expand on those ideas. As an enhancing tool – mind mapping enhances your creativity, your intuition and problem solving skills. On top of all of that, it enables you to better understand yourself and your strengths.
Essentially, mind mapping is a technique that uses a diagram to map out information in a visual manner, in which there is a main category in the center of the map, branching out into subcategories in a hierarchical form.
Thus, you can relate and group information together efficiently; it is a structural format to force you to think outside of the box. As it is visual, it keeps you engaged to concentrate on your thoughts.
Mind mapping is a great way to brainstorm, organize and keep track of goals and objectives, and make those artistic connections.They can spark breakthrough ideas and intuitive connections of where content should be and how content relates – you can visually see if your thoughts are in the right place.
Sometimes your mind doesn’t follow the conventional way to solve a problem; however, at times, following the norm can become repetitive and mundane. If your gut or intuition tells you to do something in a different and innovative way, perhaps you should follow that instinct.
With the help of a mind map, we can better understand our ideas and develop solutions. In understanding our ideas, we learn and know more about ourselves and our place in life.
Just like our intuition, sometimes our creativity can be elusive because we don’t pay attention to it or use it often enough. Your creative spirit may be dormant; however, you can awaken it through the use of a mind map.
A mind map can help you obtain a better grasp of your creativity, pull experiences from the past and present, and utilize your overall physical, mental and emotional resources. The end result of your mind map focuses on the roots in your intuition – your creativity and intuition combined provide you with that unique angle and approach to your work to creatively solve problems in your life.
With a mind map, you can take a moment to look at a visual depiction of your thoughts, make sense of it and pay more attention to the right side of the brain we refer to as the more creative and intuitive side of our brain that we tend to ignore.
A mind map is a creative connection of the intangible to the tangible. Mind maps provide visual confirmation to the thoughts running through your mind. When you flex your creative muscles, you put your feelings to paper and your perceptions are expanded. You can step away or hone in on external stimuli and turn random thoughts into an actual process.
Use a mind map everyday when sorting out thoughts to serve as a visual guide to the connection between your creativity, your intuition and intuitive guidance. Creativity and intuition are linked so, working with a mind map will not only help expand your creativity it will also help you to develop your intuition as well.
What tools and techniques do you use to enhance your creativity? If you’ve tried mindmapping how has it worked out for you?
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Virginia Cunningham is a freelance writer from California whose writing covers a range of different topics, including health and supplements, dining and travel and business and marketing.
Photo credit: flickr.com/commons
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Love the images- I used to draw lots of mindmaps and have the wonderful Buzan book.
More recently i have been introduced to bubbl.us that is a fun colourful way of doing a brainstorm although i still love colored markers and paper. I am using a mindmap for my book- thanks Virginia and Angela
Suzie,
I’m so glad you enjoyed this post and found it helpful. I also prefer to write out my own mindmap rather than use an app online.
VirginiaI
I love mind mapping! I had a neighbor who always did this. I inherited her books on mindmapping and love to look through them. You’ve inspired me to get them out and look through them and do some mind mapping finally!
Thanks!
Angela – great guest post!
Betsy,
I’m so glad you enjoyed this post!
I’ve used mind mapping in the past.
This post has inspired me to try it again.
Mindmapping is a great tool that my kids use for their studies. Because they are visually-oriented, it makes learning easy when all related points are placed in a single image or map.
I take your post as a sign that I should use mindmapping to brainstorm new ideas. This is the second to third time I am hearing about using it within the past week. Thank you, Virginia and Angela!
Hi Evelyn,
Yes, I took it as a sign too!
I’m going to make some time to do some mindmapping.
I think it will help me gain clarity.
Mindmapping is a great tool that my kids use for their studies. Because they are visually oriented, it is an easy way for them to remember all the related points in a single image.
Coincidentally, I was listening to an audio that talked about mindmapping as a wonderful tip just two days ago. I am glad to be reading your post, Virginia. I take your post as a sign that I should use this method for brainstorming new ideas.