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  • Ernest Hemingway, Vincent Van Gogh, Amy Winehouse- the idea of the tortured artist is as old

  • as art itself. But is there a link between mental illness and creativity?

  • Plato once said on the subject that he found joy in such pain and to treat it as a gift:

  • Madness, provided it comes as the gift of heaven, is the channel by which we receive

  • the greatest blessingsMadness comes from God, whereas sober sense is merely human.”

  • There’s no shortage of myths and stories of artists brooding moodily in front of a

  • canvass, musicians turning to the bottle for comfort, or writers ending their own lives.

  • One landmark study by Neuroscientist Nancy Andreasen in 1987 showed a link between creativity

  • and mental illness. Her research found that of the 30 writers she interviewed, most, 80%,

  • had been hospitalized for some mood disorder like bipolar or depression.

  • Some studies find a higher incidence of mental disorders in those in creative fields and

  • especially in those individuals whove reached some notoriety or eminence. Other studies

  • find a higher incidence of mental disorders in the family members of very creative people.

  • These results strongly hint at a genetic link.

  • Maybe it's not just genetic but neurological too. Some studies show that the brain acts

  • in similar ways when being creative and when mentally ill.

  • One study published in the journal Neuroimage found that a center of the brain, the precuneus,

  • that is normally deactivated when thinking, remains active when creative people are thinking

  • creatively. The precuneus has been linked in previous studies to things like imagining

  • the self and retrieving memories. Using MRI techniques, they found that the precuneus

  • is typically deactivated when focusing on cognitive tasks. But those that were unable

  • to suppress this part of the brain were linked with more original ideas. They also found

  • that a similar thing happened in the brain of people who scored high on schizotypy, a

  • less intense version of schizophrenia.

  • Basically when you are trying to focus on something you tune out everything around you,

  • but not creative people. According to one study published in the journal Cognitive,

  • Affective, & Behavioral Neurosciencemore-creative people may include many more events/stimuli

  • in their mental processes than do less creative people.”

  • But how does mental illness mean more creative thoughts? Well maybe it has to do with free

  • association which can be defined as the spontaneous and undirected association of ideas, emotions,

  • and feelings.

  • Sometimes free association in the unconscious mind could lead to strange and bizarre links.

  • Which isn’t a bad thing. This very process can spark novel ideas. Einstein called it

  • combinatory play”. Like coming up with a new formula for gravity or a great metaphor.

  • But sometimes the ideas are a little too far out there and can delve into the truly delusional.

  • Famous mathematical genius John Nash saidthe ideas I have about supernatural beings

  • came to me the same way that my mathematical ideas did, so I took them seriously.”

  • It’s almost like creativity and madness are on a spectrum. With creativity somewhere

  • in the middle and delusion and madness on the other end. While considering more possibilities

  • certainly leads to greater creativity, so does dwelling on a single problem.

  • One of the hallmarks of depression is neurotic thinking. Neurotic thinking can be focusing

  • on negative thoughts and feelings and constantly ruminating on things past. For instance if

  • youre like me you still remember that one time when you waved back at someone when they

  • were really waving at the person behind you. That scene replays in my head over and over.

  • ( don’t wave, just don’t wave.. oh god you waved)

  • But this rehashing can have an up side, according to a study published in the journal Trends

  • in Cognitive Sciences. Rumination means focusing on a problem for longer than most people would.

  • By dwelling on the same problem, sometimes single-mindedly, these types of people would

  • eventually come up with an interesting solution.

  • And it’s not just the pursuit of a single problem, but neurotic people might be more

  • creative too. Mostly because neurotic people are highly anxious. You know, in preparation

  • for a threat they literally imagine the worst. Like when your mom doesn’t text you back

  • you imagine something bad must have happened like a car accident or she’s in a hold up

  • at the bank. This penchant for dramatic imaginings might help creative people imagine solutions

  • most people wouldn’t.

  • While the idea of the mad genius might be alluring and seductive, it shouldn’t be.

  • Like Nancy Andreasen highlighted, these people like Kurt Vonnegut and others were successful

  • not because of their mental illness, but in spite of it. It’s hard to work when youre

  • depressed or manic. Many creative types find themselves disabled by their disorders just

  • as often as they are inspired by it.

  • Speaking of signs of creativity, are you a ummessy person? Turns out youre more

  • than just disorganized, youre probably creative! Anthony explains the research in

  • this great episode, right here.

Ernest Hemingway, Vincent Van Gogh, Amy Winehouse- the idea of the tortured artist is as old

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