Ness Labs: The 9 Habits of Curious Minds 🧠


Edition #216 – February 22nd, 2024
A newsletter by Anne-Laure Le Cunff

Hello friends,
I will keep this week’s introduction quite short.
First, I’m almost done with the camera confidence experiment I started last week. You can watch all the videos here. Tomorrow will be the last day of the experiment, and I want to try something new: a live Q&A! Join me Friday Feb 23rd at 4pm GMT (that's 8am SF / 11am NYC / 9.30pm Delhi). You can ask me anything you want about my creative process, research, running Ness Labs...
Second, I’m in Barcelona for a few days and I’m thinking of hosting an impromptu meetup on Saturday afternoon. Let me know if you’re around, and if there’s interest we can make it happen.
That’s it! I had lots of fun researching and writing this week’s article, so I hope you enjoy this edition.
Anne-Laure.

The Curiosity Matrix

All healthy human babies and young children display curiosity, suggesting this is an innate human trait. Exploring our environment and babbling questions appear almost universal in early childhood across cultures.

As an adaptive trait, curiosity draws us to seek information and new experiences. It’s how we learn about ourselves, others, and the world.

However, research shows our degree and focus of curiosity can even vary a lot. Curiosity differs between people, it evolves within one same person over the course of their lifespan, and it can even fluctuate throughout the day.

Some people tend to be more systematically curious than others. Those curious minds are generally adventurous, creative, less risk-averse, and seem to seek and enjoy exploration more than others.

They’re a diverse group of people, but the literature suggests that they share some common habits that support their personal and professional growth.

1. Seeking liminal spaces. Curious minds are not only comfortable in the in-betweens, they actively seek out those transitional moments of personal growth. Rather than racing through the uncomfortable phase of not-knowing, they enjoy exploring the gap between what they know and what they don’t know. They can fall in love with problems and revel in what poet Mary Oliver calls “the pleasure of mystery.”

2. Forming connections between ideas. Instead of thinking about the world in a linear way, curious minds think in maps. They practice networked thinking and combinational creativity, and find delight when discovering an unexpected connection between two ideas. Their mind is a garden and the world a giant playground where ideas can seed their imagination.

3. Asking questions. For curious minds, every interaction is an opportunity to learn. Exchanging good questions is one of their favorite modes of communication. They not only ask questions to others during conversations, but also to themselves when consuming content. Some of them even keep a list of their favorite questions.

4. Exploring new interests. Because the world is full of potential curiosity attractors, curious minds have many interests which may not always overlap. However, it can be hard to channel their curiosity, and the fleeting urge to explore something new just for the sake of novelty can sometimes lead to distraction.

5. Learning in public. Although it can be scary, curious minds make it a point to admit when they don’t know. Instead of trying to be the expert in the room, they consider themselves lifelong learners. They are willing to be wrong. And they generously share what they learned with fellow curious minds.

6. Challenging the default. Anything that seems obvious on the surface can become a topic of investigation for curious minds. They wonder about the reality of default definitions and test their assumptions through experimentation.

7. Listening with compassion. Because they want to deeply understand the world and others around them, curious minds tend to be empathetic. They try to listen without judgment and to embody the words of Thích Nhất Hạnh: “If we cannot listen mindfully, we cannot practice right speech. No matter what we say, it will not be mindful, because we’ll be speaking only our own ideas and not in response to the other person.”

8. Approaching difficult experiences with self-compassion. Any thought or emotion can be the seed of self-discovery for curious minds. Even without knowing the scientific terms for these habits, they practice metacognition to interrogate the thoughts that arise in their mind and interoception to understand the sensations that arise in their body. They do not try to suppress these signals, but treat them as a helpful source of information.

9. Welcoming the unpredictable. For curious minds, the fact that the world keeps on changing is a feature, not a bug. They believe that their response determines how much disruptions affect them, and they choose to respond with curiosity. They surf with chaos to not only survive, but to thrive in chaotic times.

Curiosity has many benefits – it keeps you young, it helps you learn, and it foster better relationships. Injecting a little bit of curiosity into your life goes a long way.

The good news is, anyone can (re)learn to be more systematically curious in all areas of their lives. Although some studies indicate that curiosity may have a genetic component (DRD4-7R has been dubbed the “wanderlust gene”), most researchers agree that curiosity can be nurtured.

A first step is to go through the nine habits in the Curiosity Matrix and ask yourself: how habitual are these practices in my daily life? What is one habit I can start building today to nurture my curiosity? Please hit reply and let me know!

  🛠️ TOOL OF THE WEEK  

SaneBox is an email management service that connects to your inbox, identifies important messages, and hides distractions. In this interview with the founder Dmitri Leonov, we talked about email overwhelm, how AI can help us take back control of our inbox, the benefits of combining email management and time management, the myth of inbox zero, and much more.

⚡️ Brain Picks

Scrintal seamlessly converts your creative ideas into structured knowledge using intuitive canvas, boards, and cards. Dive into the realm of visual note-taking, share your insights effortlessly and inspire others. Join the creativity revolution today! 10% off Scrintal Personal Pro with NESS10.
The Critical Thinker sharpens your mind with articles and videos that delve into logical fallacies, cognitive biases, language, and visualizations. Delivered bi-weekly. From the creator of the illustrated books Bad Arguments and Loaded Language.
Volv is an app for high performing individuals. Volv curates the most important and viral content across the internet and delivers it in 9-second articles using AI so you can be updated without doom scrolling on social media. It’s been featured on the Apple App Store and read by 60k+ users globally.

Thanks to our partners for supporting the newsletter!

🤝 Brain Trust

If you enjoy the newsletter, you'll love our community of curious minds who grow together through interactive workshops and safe discussion spaces. Here is what we have planned next week:

• Identify your strategies for mindful productivity. What systems, routines, and rituals do you need to build to be more productive without sacrificing your sanity? Join Gosia for a creative hour session on Monday to explore your own unique ways of being mindfully productive.
• Make space for metacognition. Achieve more clarity over your progress and your priorities. Join the personal experiments check-in hosted by yours truly on Wednesday and/or the community weekly review hosted by Haikal on Sunday.
• Tackle your your task list. Make progress on your projects while enjoying the company of fellow community members. Lukas and Javier are hosting coworking sessions on Mondays and Thursdays, covering all timezones.

All of these and future events are included in the price of the annual membership ($49), as well as access to the recordings of all our previous sessions and past cohort-based courses.

🌊 Brain Waves

Have a friend who wants to make the most of their mind? Send them the newsletter using your unique referral link below and unlock Reflective Minds, a database of good questions from great thinkers and creators.

Until next week, take care!
Anne-Laure.

P.S. Maybe you'll enjoy this interview with Dan Shipper about how I use ChatGPT :)

Ness Labs by Anne-Laure Le Cunff

A weekly newsletter with science-based insights on creativity, mindful productivity, better thinking and lifelong learning.

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