5/13/2026 at 12:23:05 PM
I feel like we still don’t have great research on how much of this is due to biological factors related to age and how much is due to confounding factors.I suspect that sustained creativity may be a result of continuous exposure to new experiences and concepts (which younger people are naturally situated to encounter quite often), so I try to consistently add novelty to my life as I get older, specifically targeting things way outside my comfort zone or previous interests.
For example, I’ve always been sort of uneasy with flying, so I figured I would sign up for general aviation classes and learn to fly myself, which is something I never would have had the slightest inclination toward when I was younger. I ultimately didn’t go through with it, as my wife insisted very strongly while I was signing up that I find a different form of “novelty” to pursue, but I think it illustrates what I was trying to accomplish pretty well.
Some more mundane examples include listening to music that I don’t enjoy, completely mixing up how I dress after decades of wearing the same thing, reading books opposite to my interests, taking classes in fields different than what my degree was in, and trying to meet more people who are very different from myself.
I guess we’ll see if this has any effect or not.
by Xcelerate