Cultivating Curiosity: The Art of Living a Learning Life
Written by: Faith Addicott
It will surprise no one who knows me well to learn that I set my room on fire as a child. Twice. The admonishment to not ‘play with matches’ created in me an unstoppable desire to play with matches as soon as possible. My small self reasoned that anything so fiercely against the rules must be truly spectacular. I was curious.
It was spectacular. And scary. And wondrous.
While it might not always lead to the wisest course of action, the power of curiosity is immense. Nearly unstoppable once started, curiosity contains and creates its own perpetual motion, where one question leads inexorably to another, a never-ending path of learning and wonder.
Curiosity Dwindles
Those of us who were naturally curious as children might look back and realize now that we fell out of the habit of asking ‘why’ about everything. Our parents certainly weren’t fans of incessant questions and even teachers got tired of answering us constantly. We learned to contain ourselves, to accept what was taught as good enough and our focus shifted from constantly asking why to new relationships, to graduating, to college and jobs. There are few who have really maintained that childlike skill – perpetual curiosity.
And yet….
Curiosity Can Rekindle
We have all learned from the last three years that not everything is as we thought it was. The global pandemic forced systems and societies to slow down, to take a moment to self-examine, to ask at scale for the first time in generations if the ways we were living and working were really serving us. Across the world, workplaces and communities have come to new understandings about relationships to justice, racism, and policing; we examined how to reprioritize time with the most important things like family and nature; we became more radically human in our meetings as cats and kids and pajamas became workplace normal. We shifted. That shift begs us to ask what else might be possible, to rekindle our curiosity.
As we face a multitude of wicked, complex challenges in our organizations and in our communities, I believe a curiosity mindset is one of our best openings to a healthy & resilient shared future. As a way of being, curiosity is naturally and endemically opposed to being judgmental, complacent, or bored. By itself, it can bring new joy to life, new life to work, and new innovations to everything.
CQ (The IQ of Curiosity)
Since 2011, the use of the term “curiosity quotient” or CQ has been growing. Like IQ (intelligence quotient) or EQ (emotional intelligence quotient), CQ seeks to measure and explore the effects of curiosity on our capacity to change, grow, and emerge new solutions.?
“Dr. Chamorro-Premuzic suggests that, in the future, these abilities [IQ and EQ] will still be important, but the differentiating quality for the leader will be how well they have also developed what he calls their “curiosity quotient”, or CQ.” Quoted from the article, CQ is the new EQ
Like IQ and EQ, CQ seeks to investigate and measure the human qualities that lead most to successful outcomes for our businesses and our communities.
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The Benefits of Curiosity?
With CQ in mind, here are a few examples of what I think is a very, very long list of ways that staying curious enables us to be more creative, happier, and more equitable.?
Curiosity…
Getting Curious
So HOW do we cultivate a curiosity mindset? The good news is that this is easier than you might think! As always, shifting your habits and patterns requires some intention and some practice. Here are a few ways you can practice being curious!
The Humanity of Curiosity?
It is curiosity that allows us to learn, grow, and be playful even in our work. It requires not only noticing but actively seeking out solutions. Think about it… apples have been falling from trees forever, but when Isaac Newton started to ask WHY the apples were falling we got a whole lot closer to understanding the physics of the world around us! You never know where your next ‘why’ will lead.
Now go cultivate that sense of wonder my friends. It’s part of being human and may just be the fire we’ve all been looking for… the kind that brings new growth.
PS.
If you are curious (!) there’s a short curiosity assessment through HBR that might help you answer a bit about your OWN curiosity mindset. Check it out?HERE.
Read more from A Human Workplace?here.
Author—“Shifting: How School Leaders Can Create a Culture of Change” / “Getting Unstuck” podcast host / Leadership coach
1 年"...anything so fiercely against the rules must be truly spectacular." Like banned books or restricted curriculums. Good article, Faith Addicott, MPA, MPOD, right up my podcast alley.
Professor, Practitioner & Possibilitizer | Award Winning Author & Teacher | Igniter of better tomorrows
1 年Love this Faith Addicott, MPA, MPOD!! Our friend David Cooperrider often speaks of "curiosity velocity" and how curiosity is at the heart of being an appreciative inquirer. Thank you for inviting us all to re-ignite our curiosity (even if we do not ignite our rooms) ??
Weaver, Organizational Sherlock, Mad Inclusionist, Future Delver
1 年Thanks Team! Love the picture Ariana Augustine, MSML chose to go with this piece... this little fox is so bold & curious, it's perfect!