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Thursday, December 4, 2008

Be in Control, Take Charge

by Robert L. Gisel



"3. DEVOTION TO GOALS. Geniuses know what they want and go after it. Get control of your life and schedule. Have something specific to accomplish each day." Dr.Barrios

It is a recurring theme in comments from others on the subject of genius, this sort of envy, of the ingenuity and brilliance of the Edison or the Einstein. The truth is, it is in you, should you choose to bring it out.

A correspondent expressed a difficulty she was having, something I've observed occasionally in myself and others, getting a mind to work at all, what with all the life problems and situations one has to handle or resolve. This is something more basic than having goals and being in control of your life and schedule. This is about being in control of your mind and decisive factors.

First off, one can be distracted by having a lot of things going on at once, which is okay, but keeping and juggling so many things in one's head at the same time becomes counter-productive. Sure, that is the purpose of the mind, but you won't control anything if you can't control one thing. To control one thing you have to focus on it. Even if it's only to take hold of something out of the corner of your eye, it's a focus and thus controlling something.

Here is a short set of actions that cures the dispersal. To do be able to do these you must disappear from all distractions for about 20-30 minutes; go somewhere you won't be interrupted.

1. Make a list of all the actions in your life (or work, separately, unless they are the same) that are open actions to do.
2. Make another list of anything in your life you do not feel in control of.
3. Another list, what do you feel in control of.

You should have experienced some relief at the point, a plateau by itself. Now you can do this short set of actions:

4. Go back to the first list and highlight realistically what MUST be done as opposed to what is just nice or desirable to do.
5. Pick one of those that can be done now (not something unreal, like contact the Court Clerk at 2 AM).
6. Do it. If it appears it has necessary sequential sub-actions like a, b, c, d, do a.

After this you can start to complete actions on the rest of the first list, one by one get some things done and cross them off. At some point you can re-write the first list and it will be more real and increasingly pertinent.

Get with me after you have done the steps 1-3 minimally, or preferably after step 6. Also get with me if it this bogs down for any reason, tell me what you are experiencing and I'll address that with you. This shouldn't be the case, unless some fiasco happens like you get arrested for loitering while doing 1-3. A fiasco has a different handling.

If you can't get started on any of this, if it's all too bad, select someone to take you out back and shoot you (just kidding). Seriously, your ability to do or accomplish anything you desire is your most valuable asset. Even if you don't believe that still take the baby steps 1-6, then write to me.

No one is devoid of the 24 Qualities That Geniuses Have In Common. Some IQ geniuses have said they don't have them, which is basically poppycock, being a put down of oneself. You innately have them. If only working on one trait at a time you can enhance or enrich these traits in yourself and be the next Edison, if you so desire.

gisel_creations@yahoo.com

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I also talk about this exercise from a bit different view at http://WhoWouldWrite.blogspot.com .

If you only laughed a little you'd be better for it; go here for a humorous viewpoint of blogging.

Another one, unique, designed to make you laugh, here.


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Thursday, October 30, 2008

Jobless Not Hopeless

by Robert L. Gisel


On my other blog I wrote about the economics and mechanics in earning income as an entrepreneur. As it occurs to me this has a lot to do with a number of the points of a genius it was appropriate to re-publish it here.

Being a writer means working and making a living without being somebody's employee, in my mind. Being not an employee but genuinely an entrepreneur. This web site of Barbara Winter lends support to the idea.

At one trying period of my life I went off purpose taking up a state government job. This for sure took no great creativity but the warranty of a regular paycheck versus the insecure returns of self-employment income was cozy, like an electric blanket in a bitter cold night.

Sooner or later the secure steady job will reach the limits of tolerability for the entrepreneurial minded.

If you have an avenue towards the attainment of income, exchange of products for funds that does, or will, realize subsidence it can be as creatively variable as people are different. There are commonly several mileposts you will have to accomplish to be "joyfully jobless" as Barbara flaunts above.

1) Create The Bright Idea. The new idea creates from thin air. Somewhere I heard someone say inspiration only comes around just so often you have to take advantage of it when it comes along. Not true. Decide to think of something new and do it.

I wanted to make a friend of mine laugh this morning. She is a Doctor of Dermatology so the idea was simply, how could I un-define Dermatology. At first hadn't a clue how to make a play on that term. With help from the dictionary I got inspired:

Dermatology is the field making kishke (from derma: a wrapped beef dish stuff with a flour mixture). It is the reverse of "Where's the beef?" that being epitomized by Beef Wellington.

It's strange I don't see that in her office...

There was another example of this where I was explaining to a friend how to go about the game of creating and licensing patents. Just for example, I said, what if you wanted to come up with a better mouse trap. On the spot, out of the blue, I invented one. I elaborated a box cage that triggers a guillotine trap door when the mouse approaches the cheese inside the box. Voila! A better mouse trap.

From nothing to something is the province of the artist: the new idea from thin air, the written word on a blank page, the painting on a empty canvass. All starts with a decision and that is easy. Just decide I am going to...

2) Physical Demonstration Aids Imagination. Sometimes when the ideas just won't gel into a variation what you're trying modify or originate it can help immensely to literally put it out there in front of you. Rather than molding it in your head put it in the physical universe using scraps of things from your desk drawer to shape a demonstrative model.

In the example above you could fold a piece of paper into a rectangular box. On the floor of the box fulcrum a strip of cardboard over a pen cap. Wrap a stack of credit cards with a piece of tape and slip it through a slot in the top of the box to form a trap door. Unwrap a paperclip to create a rod coming from the entrance side of the end of the ramp and upwards through the top of the box. Play around with a lip and a hook configuration on the trap door that holds it up in the open position until triggered, at which point it drops into place. Lay a piece of "cheese" at the far end of the ramp and await the mouse.

Demonstrating something in this fashion with bits and pieces of anything is a terrific aid to invention.

3) Checklist the Practicality of the Bright Idea. Make sure it withstands the tests of feasibility: it has to be something that fulfills a real need in a practical and usable fashion. This is simply done by considering it all the different ways that a consumer would regard it. Write these ways down for quick reference or as checklist.

In one's own area you have probably been thinking in this light automatically. It is your forte'. Where you don't quite visualize it, here again you give this beingness by actual doingness. Form the considering points into a checklist.

How can I think differently about this? What is a different point of view? Is this a brand new idea or does it improve upon an idea? Who would buy it? Why would someone want this? Is there anything else like it on the market? These are just a few of the questions that might be on your checklist.

4) An Economically Feasible Product Makes Good. The product should be able to be sold for 3 times what it costs to buy/make/deliver the goods. Whatever that price comes out to be has to be a value that a public will buy. The lower priced burger at McDonald's is offset by quantity, while the higher priced burger at Applebee's sells for more as it has a quality that people want and will pay more for.

A friend mine does quite well building and installing, at a much higher price, the same cabinetry middle America might buy for their homes as he deals exclusively with wealthy publics who are willing to pay more for the same product. Consideration and market has everything to do with the exchange.

With a product like writing it is your time that is valuable. Working all year on a product for $20,000 or one month for one that pays $10,000 and leaves 11 months open for more products makes it easy to see: you can only spend so much of your time at something.

5) A Lot at Bargain Prices Versus Little at a Premium. Writing, sculpting or painting alike face the same quality versus quantity issue. You should have both. The larger ticket item when sold pays a lot of bills accumulated but a steady flow of smaller introductory items keeps bread and butter on the table daily.

The biggest reason for both, why this is essential, has to do with new public versus the established clientele. You must always, always, always develop new publics to keep up an expanding client base.

6) 2% Inspiration and 98% Perspiration. This delineation of genius by Edison speaks sooth.

You could potentially sell your ideas and never have to be involved in the manufacturing or marketing. You can license patents and the purchasing company takes care of all the implementation and can get a flat fee or may negotiate a percentage return. Whatever it is it is less than the return if you yourself manufactured the invention and put it on the market as did Edison.

Even selling the idea it takes some hard work to package a bright idea that it can be sold. It may only be typing it up, drawing it out, naming it, prototype making, testing and surveying. Then you have to sell it to someone or a board of someones and may have to defend it from all manner of ploys to get without buying.

7) Administration is Too Often Foreign to the Artist. A number of my friends are the most outstandingly creative in the field but when it comes to the practical skills of administration and marketing the product they flop miserably. This is particularly true in art where the aesthetic mind stands by itself and produces exceptional product.

Where you have experienced this of yourself the answer is to get trained and educated in the skill areas lacking or hire a manager or outsource the activity.

8) Give Due Consideration to Operating in the Red Long Enough to Succeed. How much capital you will actually need to start a new activity or how much reserves will keep you funded while the returns build enough to put you in the black is more often than not underestimated. It is a different amount for each activity.

It is best to have some form of regular proceeds, monthly income or royalties while establishment occurs.

9) All Your Eggs One Basket Can Lead to a Nasty Surprise. When the fox breaks into the chicken coop if all the eggs are in one basket the loss may be total. When there are numbers of baskets he isn't likely to get into all of of them. Especially if there is more than one chicken coop.

It is a wise idea to have more than one source of income. While this applies to anyone it is extremely viable for the self employed. It might be large white eggs, brown eggs and turkey eggs, each having its own market share. It might better be from different areas altogether like eggs, goat's milk, cheese, Christmas trees and garden boulders.

10) Be Consistent. Whatever it is you do for income it has to be regularly done. One time deals tend to be just that: a big spurt of income, then a draught. At some point success will roll over into floods of income you couldn't stop if you wanted to, but until that time comes a regular output of creation is necessary.

These are from within the realm of my experiences and observations. I welcome other viewpoints and exploration of other ideas. Leave your comments of ideas you have about this.

If you like this blog donate here to the aspiring writers of the Sacramento Area Screenwriters Group.




Monday, September 22, 2008

Why Isn't Potential Enough?

by Robert L. Gisel


Plenty of potential surely helps but what really counts is whether you go the distance. The post from Chris Guillebeau of The Art of Non-Conformity strikes a note as I have seen this in other artists as well. The necessity to realize out of potential is not limited to artists but seems to be more pronounced in that realm as therein lies the most creation from nothing.

A high capacity battery is great but if you never run the engine who cares. You have to make the trip, put in the time and exert the effort to carry through to a fully realized product.

Chris's hits a very hot button for artists provoking the question what to do about it. I couldn't resist putting in my 2 cents and am reprinting these here as I liked what I had to say and what to expound on it. My comments:

Tips for the Dip:


Be At Peace With the Ebb Tide

My all time success action at such moments in the illusion of failure is to go with the calm that occurs at the turning of the tide. After the incoming fury and wrath of the incoming tide when it looks like all is spent for naught and now the tide will recede the sea goes very calm. That's when I observe the calmness, tune in to the creative forces of the universe and set about a new onslaught. It's only failure if you fail to persist.

Have the Last Supper.

You have to follow the ebb tide calm with the Last Supper, so to speak. When it appears defeat has beset me or the game is lost I literally go fix myself a special meal in my kitchen or get something I really like at a restaurant and call it the "Last Supper". This is metaphorical for meaning it appears I just lost the title but the eye of the tiger will see it through to win anew. Always at this time a bright idea or brilliant new phase plan emerges and I know something remarkable and great is just around the corner.

Difference of Potential Creates Energy.

When you think about it no energy is created in the absence of a difference in potential; without that there is no flow. What has more difference of potential than the work of an artist creating something from a blank page, an empty canvass or a void of space.

How Do I know It's Genuinely Good?

What makes it good or not is 1) only that it be different and 2) the discipline in the application of craftsmanship.

1) If you can say what hasn't been said or express a new view of it like a clever metaphor it will stimulate thought in others, you can be assured. Be yourself and express what comes from your heart and that will take you the longest way.

2) A casual observer may say he likes it but the artist, who knows his craft well enough from study and practice will apply his skills with the finesse that entices the involvement and imagination of the intended public, knowing fully well what rules or methodology made it likable.

The smug pleasure from accomplishing my first screenplay was that only I did it; the screenplay itself is a far cry from acceptable. Same of the second screenplay first rendering on paper. By the ninth re-write following the advices of an excellent mentor it transformed to the realm of top notch. Now doing it right comes naturally.

Know what you have that is unique. Study up. Take time to improve your skills. Then success will follow your persistence.

Take a Walk to The Top of the Mount

When all else fails here is another metaphor. In the circumstance where it appears my work is crap after all, that I have really messed it all up, spun my wheels to go nowhere and may well be defeated and left for dead on the battlefield this calls for a walk to the top of the mount to come back with the holy tables. You have to take some time out and review where you stand and be honest with yourself. Get a new view from the highest point of the journey. This is best done by reviewing your goals and most heartfelt desires candidly and reaffirm these or adjust them as needed.

A lost battle only means that you still have to confront the war.

Robert
WhoWouldWrite.blogspot.com

I am interested in the experience of others in this light. Have you observed these things and how? Post a comment to let me know your thoughts on this.






Saturday, August 2, 2008

Imagination IS Genius

by Robert L. Gisel



I have come across an interesting blog post that set me thinking about an interesting aspect of genius as it pertains to art and artists. In this post of Patricia's Wisdom the point is the art and artists making sand sculptures.

No small feat I must say first of all. The one piece she took a picture of, 3 - 4 foot bear, is actually quite well done as a piece of art in it's proportions and detail. Considering the media making something of this size at all is remarkable let alone one that is very good sculpture.

Imagination, in all that I illustrated in my last post, IS genius even if observed manifested for only 3 hours duration of the production of an art piece. The aesthetic mind seems to draw on all of the 24 qualities though, not just imagination. It just struck me how this relates to art seeing Patricia's post and is what prompted me to comment:

"There is a bit of genius in every work of art, so the focus and dedication for several hours as you pointed out actually strikes me as a genius quality, is what stood out when I read your blog post."

Go check out her post and of course the bear picture here, and let me know what you think of it.






Saturday, July 26, 2008

Quality Of A Genius: Imagination

by Robert L. Gisel



While it is the last of the 24 qualities that geniuses have in common imagination is very likely the most sought out characteristic and perhaps the most key one. Without it all the bright ideas leading to the renown inventions, even the not so well known ones, would never have happened. This also can be easily developed by any individual.

This is how this quality of a genius is characterized by Dr. Barios:

"24. IMAGINATION. Geniuses know how to think in new combinations, see things from a different perspective, than anyone else. Unclutter your mental environment to develop this type of imagination. Give yourself time each day to daydream, to fantasize, to drift into a dreamy inner life the way you did as a child."

While inspiration is a factor of imagination observation is a keynote of imagination. If you only make an effort to observe things and question them imagining new possibilities will result. Thomas Jefferson did this religiously looking out at the environment anywhere he went and constantly taking notes of what he saw. He regularly questioned whether there was a better way to do something. One result of this was his famous house he called Monticello which itself was a new direction in architecture but also contained some innovations he dreamed up. The dumbwaiter was an idea he had for bring wine up from the wine cellar and he devised an underground conveyor to transport honey pots to a dumping tank, to mention just a couple.

When Edison embarked on a new invention he started with the premise something might be able to be done then he started reading everything he could on the subject. He'd regularly go through scientific papers and even go see the works of scientists that were experimenting around the subject. Then he ran numerous tests to see results from many different materials and combinations. For this he kept shelves of every possible material in his laboratory. The fruits of his observations paid off in workable creations.

Looking at how things are done and observing how things work or the way machines are put together leads then to ideas of how to improve these and even entirely new creations. You first have to observe.

Whole magazines are devoted to showing what has been done in home improvements, gardens, decks or patios, landscaping and renovations. This is after all an observation process.

Mental agility can be a factor but this is not simply a trait one is born with, it takes development. You have to use the mind to have one. Reading many things and education in general are valid therapies to enhance the mind's functioning not to mention the well being these realize.

Just as one exercises to get more limber muscles one can exercise ones mind. You can exercise your mind by taking up something and just for fun see how many different ways you could configure it.

For example take the floor plan of your house. How many different variations can you think for laying out the rooms and changing the positions of doors and closets and the location of walls and rooms. Or you could walk down a street and observe businesses at random and imagine ways to improve their efficiency or changes that would be most ideal. How many ways could one toast bread, brew coffee or open a can? Regularly doing exercises like these would soon find yourself with more mental agility.

Memory can also be an area to address. The less accessable memory you have the less data you have with which to create new combinations. Imagination is taking known datums and palcing these in new combinations as well as to extrapolate previously unknown datums and new theories.

Here too you can develop this by games that test the memory and extend it. Just for fun remember all the houses you've lived in with colors of the walls or the styles of the windows. Or all the pets you've had or any like just for fun rememoring.The more you can remember the more you can visualize new combinations of objects and circumstances in the present.

There is even a book that works on recall in a self help forum. Self Analysis by L. Ron Hubbard has the techniques that you can use in your own home with amazing results in improving memory. This book puts it down to a science that has a high degree of workability in systematically enhancing memory.

I myself was one time stymied on what to with an addition to business entrance. after about a week of doing the processes from this book found I could now facilely imagine the addition rapidly a number of different ways. Thus you can see how improving memory improves imagination.

No one has a monopoly on imagination and anyone can improve their own simply by putting attention and effort to the task.



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24 Qualities That Geniuses Have In Common

By Robert L. Gisel with text from Dr. Barrios


 For your perusal I am posting the full text of the article on the genius characteristics.

 As anyone can develop the same traits himself by simply knowing and conscientiously working on the 24 qualities these form a very useful frame of reference.

 “Most people have the mistaken idea that geniuses are born, not made”, declared clinical psychologist Dr. Alfred Barrious, founder and director of the Self-Programmed Control Center of Los Angeles and author of the book, Towards Greater Freedom and Happiness.

 “But if you look at the lives of the worlds greatest geniuses like Edison, Socrates, DaVinci, Shakespeare, Einstein, you will discover they all had 24 personality characteristics in common.

 “These are traits that anyone can develop. It makes no difference how old you are, how much education you have, or what you have accomplished to date. Adopting these personality characteristics enables you to operate on a genius level.”

 Here are the Characteristics Dr. Barrios lists, which enable geniuses to come up with and develop new and fruitful ideas:

 "1. DRIVE. Geniuses have a strong desire to work hard and long. They’re willing to give all they’ve got to a project. Develop your drive by focusing on your future success, and keep going.

 "2. COURAGE. It takes courage to do things others consider impossible. Stop worrying about what people will think if you’re different.

"3. DEVOTION TO GOALS. Geniuses know what they want and go after it. Get control of your life and schedule. Have something specific to accomplish each day.

 "4. KNOWLEDGE. Geniuses continually accumulate information. Never go to sleep at night without having learned at least one new thing each day. Read. And question people who know.

 "5. HONESTY. Geniuses are frank, forthright and honest. Take the responsibility for things that go wrong. Be willing to admit, ‘I goofed’ and learned from my mistakes.

 "6. OPTIMISM. Geniuses never doubt they will succeed. Deliberately focus your mind on something good coming up.

 "7. ABILITY TO JUDGE. Try to understand the facts of a situation before you judge. Evaluate things on an opened minded, unprejudiced basis and be willing to change your mind.

 "8. ENTHUSIASM. Geniuses are so excited about what they are doing, it encourages others to cooperate with them. Really believe that things will work out well. Don’t hold back.

 "9. WILLINGNESS TO TAKE CHANCES. Overcome your fear of failure. You won’t be afraid to take chances once you realize you can learn from your mistakes.

 "10. DYNAMIC ENERGY. Don’t sit on your butt waiting for something good to happen. Be determined to make it happen.

 "11. ENTERPRISE. Geniuses are opportunity seekers. Be willing to take on jobs others won’t touch. Never be afraid to try the unknown.

 "12. PERSUASION. Geniuses know how to motivate people to help them get ahead. You’ll find it easy to be persuasive if you believe in what you’re doing.

 "13. OUTGOINGNESS. I’ve found geniuses able to make friends easily and be easy on their friends. Be a ‘booster’ not somebody who puts others down. That attitude will win you many valuable friends.

 "14. ABILITY TO COMMUNICATE. Geniuses are generally able to get their ideas across to others. Take every opportunity to explain your ideas to others.

 "15. PATIENCE. Be patient with others most of the time, but always be impatient with your self. Expect far more of yourself than others.

 "16. PERCEPTION. Geniuses have their mental radar working full time. Think more of others’ needs and wants than you do your own.

"17. PERFECTIONISM. Geniuses cannot tolerate mediocrity, particularly in themselves. Never be easily satisfied with your self. Always strive to do better.

 "18. SENSE OF HUMOR. Be willing to laugh at your own expense. Don’t take offense when the joke is on you.

 "19. VERSATILITY. The more things you learn to accomplish, the more confidence you will develop. Don’t shy away from new endeavors.

 "20. ADAPTABILITY. Being flexible enables you to adapt to changing circumstances readily. Resist doing things the same old way. Be willing to consider new options.

 "21. CURIOSITY. An inquisitive, curious mind will help you seek out new information. Don’t be afraid to admit you don’t know it all. Always ask questions about things you don’t understand.

 "22. INDIVIDUALISM. Do things the way you think they should be done, without fearing somebody’s disapproval.

"23. IDEALISM. Keep your feet on the ground — but have your head in the clouds. Strive to achieve great things, not just for yourself but for the better of mankind.

 "24. IMAGINATION. Geniuses know how to think in new combinations, see things from a different perspective, than anyone else. Unclutter your mental environment to develop this type of imagination. Give yourself time each day to daydream, to fantasize, to drift into a dreamy inner life the way you did as a child."

 Those are the points of a genius. I'm sure you can ways to improve these qualities in your self to enhance your survival. Leave me your comments how you would use this data.





Saturday, April 5, 2008

What Is A Genius Anyway?

by Robert L Gisel



The article "24 Qualities That Geniuses Have In Common" I had seen before so I did a search to find it again. This is a very popular article republished a lot so I am not going to re-post it yet again just yet. Since I can really relate to it and these qualities though I highly recommend the article you can see in full here.

What fascinated me the most is responses to it particularly from a number of individuals of the Mensa group. One lady said these couldn't be the common traits as she was a Mensa and only had about 16 of the traits. Another gal said she was a Mensa but didn't really think of herself as a genius just as one with exceptional memory. One guy said he was a Mensa and he just gave a heavy sigh. Others have said that there are geniuses who decidedly do not manifest these traits.

The name Bobby Fisher came up as one not exhibiting the 24 qualities, such as outgoing, saying he was rather reclusive. This was not an issue in his earlier life going to competitions and exhibitions but certainly when his competition chess was held up as the symbolic win or lose of the Cold War with Russia he became quirky to say the least. You probably would too if your every move was intensively scrutinized and monitored by banks of the press as well as the diplomatic front men for several nations.

That is not about genius though. That is about suppression. The goal of Suppressive Persons is that others will have less reach out.

Mensa is a group that requires an IQ in the top 2% and then one is said to be a genius. This would a score of 130 or 132 depending on which test you take at least per the children's page. Personally I have no particular impulse to become a Mensa, never knew what was required. Now I see I have tested regularly well above the minimum for the past 3 decades so I can talk from the position of experience.

Perhaps we are talking about 2 different things here, Geniuses and Geniuses Manifest. Having a genius IQ is one thing. Using it to push inspiration into real life manifestations is quite another thing.

IQ is the ability to distinguish between things and interrelate things, to see likenesses or dissimilarities. It means that one could invent the light bulb but it is no guarantee that one will, left alone, carry through and get it made. The Rain Man from the movie of that title would no doubt test out very high on an IQ test but we won't see a string of inventions coming out of him into households.

Edison, inventor of the incandescent light bulb, said it the best, "Genius is one percent inspiration and 99% perspiration." You would be hard pressed to find a place in the world today where you wouldn't find a light bulb. Edison could easily be put into "24 Qualities That Geniuses Have In Common" and stand up to the test.

Benjamin Franklin would also make the grade. His industry and inspiration provided a number of well known inventions as well as resulting in his becoming one of the most internationally renown Americans and as a Founding Father of the new nation. That he later sometimes demonstrated lessor attributes such as vanity and lust on occasion only shows that he was humanoid and does not demean his greatness as a genius.

Scholastic achievement itself does not make a genius. Henry Ford had only a third grade formal education, but look what he produced in the Ford Motor Company. This became an issue when he felt he had been slandered by someone calling him stupid and Ford sued him for this. The Judge in trying to understand this pointed out that automotive engineering was a highly technical subject, so how could he handle this without an education. Ford pointed out that he had a row of 10 buttons on his desk, each one for a person of expertise. Whenever he needed any one of those areas of knowledge he just pushed a button and the expert came running.

Ford certainly did know how to put people and things together into very workable combinations and dynamically engineer his dreams.

In the neighborhood where I am staying currently the street names are those of the well known inventors: Watt, Edison, Howe, Bell, Marconi, Fulton, Whitney and Morse. Those men brought us in the main the steam engine, filament light bulb, sewing machine, telephone, submarine, cotton gin and the telegraph, just to mention only the one most well known of their inventions. One could place these men into the genius category as well examples of the 24 genius qualities.

These pioneers in development are well known by their accomplishment, or as Edison said, their 98% perspiration. It could thus could be said it isn't enough to simply be smart. One has to to do.

Using "24 Qualities That Geniuses Have In Common" as stimulating factors to focus on anyone can increase their own genius. There are some tools and techniques beyond that that can be utilized to develop and expand each of those characteristics, but therein are the subjects of my upcoming posts on this blog.

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