I just spent a month in Australia. And I want to talk about what it actually did to my brain.
Something happens when you pull yourself out of your routine and put yourself somewhere unfamiliar. You start to wake up a little different. You notice things you’d ignored before. You think in ways you haven’t in a while.
And in the AI age, I think that matters more than most people are giving it credit for.
AI is taking on more and more of the pure execution like writing that ad copy, pulling that sales lead list, designing that beautiful exec dashboard. But original thinking (that AI can challenge and poke and prod from 18 viewpoints and translate into 80 languages)…
That comes from a brain that isn’t on autopilot.
Stepping outside your comfort zone in one part of your life tends to make you bolder in other parts.
The person who tries AI-assisted graphic design for the first time, even though they’ve always said they’re not a creative, is more likely to sign up for a camping trip that scares them a little. The person who hikes a waterfall on a random Tuesday comes back to their desk more willing to take on something they’ve been avoiding.
I really think these things are connected.
Your personal life and your work life, as much as we try to separate them, feed off each other constantly. I don’t think we talk about that enough.
Especially right now, the people who thrive are going to be the ones who keep finding new ways to think.
(Also, yes, I climbed to the top of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, fed a wallaby, hiked a waterfall, and drove a speedboat. I’m now back in NYC ready to deliver the best work of my career.)
Something happens when you pull yourself out of your routine and put yourself somewhere unfamiliar. You start to wake up a little different. You notice things you’d ignored before. You think in ways you haven’t in a while.
And in the AI age, I think that matters more than most people are giving it credit for.
AI is taking on more and more of the pure execution like writing that ad copy, pulling that sales lead list, designing that beautiful exec dashboard. But original thinking (that AI can challenge and poke and prod from 18 viewpoints and translate into 80 languages)…
That comes from a brain that isn’t on autopilot.
Stepping outside your comfort zone in one part of your life tends to make you bolder in other parts.
The person who tries AI-assisted graphic design for the first time, even though they’ve always said they’re not a creative, is more likely to sign up for a camping trip that scares them a little. The person who hikes a waterfall on a random Tuesday comes back to their desk more willing to take on something they’ve been avoiding.
I really think these things are connected.
Your personal life and your work life, as much as we try to separate them, feed off each other constantly. I don’t think we talk about that enough.
Especially right now, the people who thrive are going to be the ones who keep finding new ways to think.
(Also, yes, I climbed to the top of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, fed a wallaby, hiked a waterfall, and drove a speedboat. I’m now back in NYC ready to deliver the best work of my career.)