Source: Hermit Musings (Author)
PART ONE
We’ve all heard expressions like “Silence is golden.” And we’ve been exposed to the guidance that listening to others is a gift. (Thoreau: “The greatest compliment that was ever paid me was when one asked me what I thought, and attended to my answer.”)
We cannot really listen when we are talking. There’s something special about halting the flow of our chatter and opening our ears and other senses to our world. I believe that silence is beyond golden—it’s precious.
A fascinating attribute of silence is that creativity flows from it. It’s fascinating, partly because it’s also a paradox: something comes from nothing. Out of the void of silence emerges imaginative and original things. (Maybe in a future posting I will explore the parallel between this point and an insight that quantum mechanics brings us: subatomic particles—real things—do slip in and out of existence.)
Creativity is the act of bringing something into existence—something that never existed before. It’s a kind of artistic imagination. It’s bringing the new and unexpected into being—from which change and evolution stem. Creativity is also a renewing process that spawns vitality and innovation. It fosters freshness and helps break the dreary rut we may find ourselves in. Creativity is even a form of healing—in the sense that it is intelligence, which leads to regeneration and healing. Our body, our immune system, must be open to our environment, and this kind of intelligence fosters health and healing.
Language also can be creative. It connects us to others. We relate to each other by symbols, creating a common world in our heads. The cosmos is creative. It is unpredictable, unexpected, and constantly evolving. New qualities are continually emerging—things that could not have been conceived of before.
Creativity is often confused with novelty—but it’s very different; it’s far deeper. Novelty is, by definition, something new, but it’s usually something assembled from existing things. It’s just a rearrangement of stuff that’s already around, into something different. It’s often a repetitive process that can eventually lead to a rut—a copy-cat, frenetic existence that lacks true creativity. It can feed fashions and fads, that become addictive and encourage our grasping for the unattainable, as we try to feed an insatiable hunger. When we fall prey to novelty, we become numb and dull. We close ourselves off to our world—hewing to the fad, becoming rigid and dogmatic.
PART TWO
There is a dark side to creativity, however. When our ego enters the picture or our desire for power grabs us, things can go awry. Creativity may then, for example, feed runaway and harmful technology. Language can also go to the dark side of creativity. When language becomes propaganda, it spreads fear; inducing people to succumb to domination and control.
Our modern culture is overflowing with words and noise; they distract us. The ancients were better at welcoming silence. They opened to it, actively sought it; whereas modern people tend to fear it. We contemporary folks have also detached from nature and its creative calmness. Instead of opening to the wisdom of nature’s silence, we attempt to control it, to bend it to our noisy will.
We can, however, open ourselves to the creativity of the silence, as the sages once did (and many still do). How can we do that? One way: simply put attention to the void. Seek and enter the silence. That means finding the time to turn away from the modern fast lane. Entering the silence opens us up to our—and the universe’s—creativity. We can attend to the void by not hurrying; by sitting with the silence and awaiting its wisdom and inspiration. Creative thoughts literally pop into our heads when we enter the void. They don’t necessarily come from us, and they’re not owned by us—in a sense they’re already in the void, waiting to be received. Our inner space is that void. We share it with all beings.
It’s paradoxical that we can become creative by doing nothing; that we can mature and heal—through inaction. It’s the way of the Tao, taught us by Taoism. Two partial verses from the Tao Te Ching say it beautifully:
Therefore, the Master
Acts without doing anything
And teaches without saying anything.
And
Practice not-doing
And everything will fall into place.
Although words can be special, the silence between words is precious. Can I allow that silence to be? Can I respectfully and reverentially enter it? We become free in that space between words—free to open, to soften; free to connect to our natural instincts. We can catch our mental breath. Through meditation we seek to exist for a short time in a space that is without thoughts, words, concepts. It’s not easy. When we can do it, we find that we have a direct contact with the void—that precious silence.
[Note: These last two postings on silence were inspired by The Blackwinged Night:
Creativity in Nature and Mind, by F. David Peat, 2000.]
Filed under: creativity Tagged: | awareness, creative, nature, perception, silence, wisdom




Jen,
The terrifying fear of the ego disappearing blocks silence from occurring.
Sid
Yes, I often wonder why so many see any type of silence as loneliness. If only they would see it as a door opening and an invitation to step inside through a portal where time and space are non existant. And you are free to link into the intelligence of the universe.
Jen,
Silence as I understand it is the ending of inner chatter which interferes with our clear awareness of what is happening both within and outside…sound doesn’t disappear but instead takes on a fascinating freshness often experienced in childhood.
Sid
Sid, One doesn’t need external silence to meditate. nor do they need it to channel creativity. What one must do is silence their own mind. They must go into themselves. When they do this the world(external stimuli) is blocked out. The outside noises become almost static. You are there in body but you are so far removed in mind, yet if something happens or you need to hear something you are able to snap out of it in the split of a second. You’re subconscious mind is always aware unconsciously. Your brain is on automatic…you WILL hear or your body WILL react if it is necessary.
As an example of what I am talking about; I’m not a very party type social person but my ex husband was. We would go to different parties and I could sit quietly to the side amongst all the loud music or loud talking and stare off into my own world and hear nothing, absolutely nothing. I would tune the whole party out but yet if my baby cried, no matter how deep a trance I would be in, I snapped out immediately.
Once you no how to go into yourself you don’t need external silence. you just need to relax and stare until the outside world fades. You go where your mind takes you…and it’s always wonderful. If you want to create, you have to blend that meditative state with your left brain because your left brain has to keep you connected. When I write poetry I can write it in my mind but then it will be gone. If I want to have it in tangible form, then my left brain has to consciously scribe the dictations of my right brain. It’s only when I write poetry that I can hear my 2 sides talking to one another. I can hear one part of me (left brain) actually say “wait up” when my right brain is spitting out the words to my poetry faster than I can right. It’s in those moments that I can actually feel 2 parts of me as separate from each other. I am always struggling to write as fast as my creative brain is dictating. If I am too slow I may miss poetic phases and not be able to retrieve them. It’s like the words come perfectly and then they are gone. If I got it down on paper I was lucky. I truly feel like I am just a scribe in those moments when poems in their entirety just flow into my mind. I love it!!!
Hi Liana,
Your question is an excellent one…unfortunately I am not a professional hypnotist and feel unqualified to offer an authoritative answer.
Meditation as described by various sources including Ekhart Tolle is a form of self hypnosis and considered the most common approach to quiet the mind…the goal as I understand hypnosis is to send a message to the subconscious mind and this depends on the person’s willingness to transfer control of the left brain (ego)to the hypnotist…I suspect this is more of an art form than a learned technique.
Sid
I am an RN and have acquired a certificate in Clinical Hypnotherapy. My “issue” with hypnotherapy is how we “talk” the person into a trance. I do understand that this can be really effective by overriding the left brain chatter in someone’s head for them, yet there is a power struggle with most people to let go of their logical, past/future oriented, physical based identification of their egos to allow access to their creative, present, internal and universal connection aspects of their egos (Sid). I learned through practicing presence (Ekhart Tolle) that I can quiet my mind anytime, with practice.
The funny part is that when I “thought” more about how to quiet my mind, I was compelled to look into how I could teach this. I wondered if there was a website name of http://www.quietyourmind.com. Well, lo and behold! It is Blank. Brilliant.