Christopher Webber wrote: >As an actor, and more to this particular point, playwright, I do >not recognise Don Satz's "creative bursts", which sound horribly >like emotional geysers. Different strokes for different folks. I don't know why Christopher would equate a creative burst with an emotional geyser; that's his problem to deal with. Of course, creativity is not restricted to artistic pursuits; it is applicable to all areas of a person's life. I have successfully utilized creative thinking in my profession as the starting point of a sequential process: creative thought, planning, implementation, follow-through, and critical review. That creative thinking was never along the lines of an emotional geyser. Christopher, in reference to my creative thinking while driving: >I might have hoped you'd be concentrating on the road, rather than on your >creative juices... Any moron can drive a vehicle. While driving, there's a lot of available brain space just waiting for additional mental activities. When all is said, the proof is in the results. As I've indicated before, each of us has our own way and time of thinking creatively. My way and time has worked excellently for me. Both Sterling and Christopher seem to have a hesitancy of adding their emotions to the mix. I do not. I'm well aware of the dangers of letting emotions get in the way, and I make sure that it doesn't happen when I'm involved in important matters. Further, it's not emotions that need to be erased during the creative process, but all preconceptions and established rules and routines. Don Satz [log in to unmask]