The Psychology of Money - An Investment Manager\'s Guide to Beating the Market

(Grace) #1

  1. Its objective evaluations of situations help you to behave
    appropriately and with self-discipline.

  2. It helps you to get appropriate consultation and advice
    without making you feel that this is a sign of inadequacy.

  3. It can direct you to self-improvement as growth or as an
    adventure rather than as a chore, because nothing is
    “wrong” with you. It does not talk about symptoms or
    problems.


As I said earlier, in my own creative work this transformation
from critic to ally has made all the difference. It has been hugely
freeing. An example? I rarely suffer from the dreaded writer’s block
now. I can sit in front of a blank page, write for a while, set it
aside, then read it, and calmly state, “Yuck, this is awful.” In the
past, I would have found diversions to keep me from even attempt-
ing the writing. Assuming that somehow I did manage to sit and
create, I dreaded the inevitable two-hour critique that would fol-
low. (“You call THAT an insightful piece of writing?! Blah, blah,
blah... ”) The result? Much lower creative output. Now, though,
the process is very different, with the critic as ally. I enjoy the cre-
ative process. I know that sometimes I’ll strike oil and sometimes
it’s a dry hole. Just keep drilling. Importantly, I don’t get discour-
aged; I’m ready to try again later that day. Creating this personal
safety has been the key.
A word of caution. I showed this material to a colleague in the
money management business and his response was, “I don’t have
a problem censoring myself, I just let whatever I’m thinking fly.”
Right. He does. Because of this, his coworkers blanch at the thought
of brainstorming with him. His internal critic becomes an external
critic, slicing and dicing others at will. If a person has a critic—
internal or external—that is running rampant, he won’t foster a
safe environment for creativity. He probably won’t get the feed-
back that he needs to change anything, either. Why? Because he
has already intimidated his coworkers, who are his main source of
constructive feedback.

The Creative Investor 137

14-25 ware 137 1/19/01, 1:14 PM

Free download pdf