Tag Archive: flow


FLOW by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (Harper Collins, 1991)

This is not a self-help book but readers should gain some modicum of enlightenment from a study of the psychology of optimal experience.

In layman’s terms the Hungarian psychologist (who works in California) sets out to discover what makes humans feel happy and fulfilled. A definite plus from his findings is that this a life skill that can be enjoyed by anyone since “money, power, status and possessions do not, by themselves, necessarily add one iota to the quality of life”.

Anecdotal evidence to substantiate this is provided by surgeons, musicians or chess players but the theory is deemed to be equally applicable to all walks of life including plumbers or mechanics. More than once I was reminded of Pirsig’s Zen & the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance which covers similar territory in more poetic terms. Continue reading

28827428_1722382701133852_2950931224236982814_oToday I’m feeling stuck with no sense that I’m making progress with anything.

This blocked state led me to explore thinkers who have studied what being creative means and, perhaps even more importantly, what makes us happy.

Higher income and personal wealth don’t create this state of bliss. As Mihaly Csikszentmihaly (pronounced chick-sent-me-high-eee) explains in his TED talk, it’s all about finding something that helps you get into a state where time seems to stand still and you feel fully immersed in a state of flow. The nearest to reaching this ideal place is being in control and getting stimulated  – I’m working on it!!

Zen water feature from the Japanese Garden at Portland, Oregon.

Maybe it’s the because it’s the end of a week in which I’ve been nursing a cold, but today I just felt a wave of calm that I want to hold onto and not analyse too closely.

A day for going with the flow and feeling good.