Karim Rashid created his own creative manifesto, giving a 50-point guide to life and creative design. Of the 10 that I read, the first one really spoke to me. It was “don’t specialize.” To me, this means, “be a jack-of-all-trades,” and that is term someone has used to describe me in the past. I am, in fact, a jack-of-all-trades. I am an audio post-production major, but not only do I understand audio for film, I also am proficient with audio for music and theatre. Outside of audio, I am a pretty good photographer, and excellent leader/teacher. I have bicycle maintenance skills, I am a rock-climbing instructor, and I’m an Eagle Scout. That’s quite a few skills, in quite a few different areas, and I haven’t even told you all of my skills. I certainly have not specialized my skills in any one specific area. With that wide variety of skills comes tips one can give to help others broaden their horizons as well, and here are some of mine.
1. Get out and do something. You’re not going to be able to be recognized for anything if all you do is sit inside and play video games all day. You’re not going to have an earth-shattering idea that improves someone’s life if all you do is play Minecraft all day. For me, what worked was getting a job with an outdoor recreation facility. It became my job to go outside and do something, which led to that becoming a habit.
“Nothing in the world is more common than unsuccessful people with talent, leave the house before you find something worth staying in for.” –Banksy
2. Have a purpose for what you do. Going off of what Banksy said, people are too content nowadays with just doing stuff for themselves, with only short-term benefits. However, your successes will be so much sweeter if you are doing what you do for a reason.
I am a Young Life leader, and what we do is we give high schoolers and middle schoolers a place to come and hang out, and have a great time. We give them a chance to go to camp in the summer, and get away from their homes. The homes they live in might be broken, they might be abusive, they might be in the poorest county in Ohio (here. Athens). What we do, we do for a purpose: to give kids somewhere they can be themselves and get away from the hard things in their lives. And that purpose makes our efforts worthwhile. Without that purpose, we would have no reason whatsoever to do what we do, and it would be worthless.
3. Your work is never done.
“A great work of art is never finished, it is abandoned.” –Josh Antonuccio
There will always be a way to improve what you do. You will never be completely satisfied with your works. You have to learn to make it the best work you can make it, and put it out into the world to thrive. Who knows, maybe you will be discovered by someone big for it. What is guaranteed, though, is that there is someone out there who will be able to build upon it.
4. Work together with someone. It’s the idea of collective intelligence. To use a cliché, two heads are better than one. When you have a great idea for something you want to make or do, bounce that idea off a friend, or someone you know has experience with something similar to what you want to do. Get their ideas on the subject, because they will have ideas that you won’t even dream of. If their idea is a good one, incorporate it, and it will make your end product that much better.
5. Look at someone better than you, and emulate them.
An acquaintance of mine named Randy Marshman once told me “the only way to get better at something is to find someone better than you at it, and try to emulate them.”
That advice really helped me become a better photographer. Browsing the Internet on StumbleUpon, I have seen many amazing photos. I have taken bits and pieces of things I’ve learned from each of those photos and used them to improve my picture taking. I’ve watched friends of mine in the photojournalism school taking pictures, and incorporated their methods of photography into mine. Through all that, I have seen a major increase in the quality of my photos.
6. Have original ideas. If you have an original idea, you will be more likely to shatter someone’s world or improve their life. If you’re the person someone bounces an idea off of (see number 4), your original idea could be the one they never would’ve ever dreamed of, and you will have improved their project.
“One Original Thought is worth 1000 Meaningless Quotes.” –Banksy
7. Stand by your ideas and creations. I suppose that is a little bit redundant, seeing as your creations are your ideas, but stand by them nonetheless. Not everyone is going understand the point you’re trying to get across, and if they do, not everyone will agree with it. If it is truly a great idea, there will be those that oppose it. Your creation, unless it is a robot with state-of-the-art AI, will not be able to defend itself. Since it is your creation, your brainchild, you will need to be there to defend it, and convince people that it is relevant and necessary.
An example of application of this would be the game of Apples to Apples. Say you play your card, and the person judging discards it. Since you played the card, you obviously believe that it is relevant and necessary. Being that it was discarded, you are going to try your hardest to convince the judging player that your idea was the best of them all. The same goes for your creation, the likes of which the world has never seen. You need to convince the judges that it is the best idea, and they need to include it in their lives.
8. Don’t be afraid to raise controversy. If you raise controversy with your ideas and actions, then that is evidence that the offended party has a mind that is not open enough. If they take offense at what you do, take that as a teaching opportunity. Pull them aside, and, like I said above, convince them that your idea is worthwhile, and the best one out there at that point in time. Use the time you have with them as a way to open your mind a little bit, too. Get their opinion, and, if it’s a good one that you can understand, maybe use it to amend your idea/action.
9. Be able to handle defeat. You won’t always come out on top. That’s just part of strengthening yourself. Again, to use somewhat of a cliché, pick yourself up when you fall, and learn from your mistakes. Learn what you did wrong, why your idea wasn’t accepted as you’d hoped, and correct that. You will come out a better man…or woman.
10. Have an open mind. This is the most important one. This is the key to not being specialized. This is the key to being able to accomplish numbers 1-9 above. If you don’t live with an open mind, you will not be able to learn from your mistakes, you won’t be able to draw in ideas from people who think differently than you, you won’t be able to utilize the most important tool you have – the rest of the world, connected to you via that Ethernet cable plugged into your computer, or the WiFi you’re connected to. If there is one thing I would tell people is the secret to growing and strengthening oneself, in many areas, it is this:
You. Must. Have. An. Open. Mind.
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