Why do your best ideas often come when you're in the shower?
You're stuck on a math problem. You stare at it for hours. Nothing. You give up and go for a walk or take a shower. SuddenlyβBAM!βthe answer appears. Is this magic? No. It's your brain switching gears from "Focused Mode" to "Diffuse Mode."
When you are totally stuck, what should you do?
π€ Which thinking lens(es) did you use?
Select all the lenses you used:
π± A Small Everyday Story
Leo is crying over his LEGO tower. It keeps falling.
"I can't do it!" he yells.
Mom says: "Leave it. Let's go ride bikes."
Leo is mad but they go.
While pedaling, Leo says: "Wait! I need a wider base!"
He runs home and fixes it.
The bike ride solved the LEGO problem.
See more guidance β
π§ Thinking habits this builds:
- Learning to self-regulate when stuck (proactive breaks)
- Valuing unstructured time (play, walking, dreaming)
- Understanding that "not working" is sometimes part of working
- Patience with the creative process
πΏ Behaviors you may notice (and reinforce):
- A child walking away from a frustrating task and coming back calm
- "I'm going to sleep on it"
- Getting ideas in weird places (car, bath, bed)
How to reinforce: If they are stuck and getting angry, MANDATE a break. "Brain break time! 10 jumping jacks and a glass of water. Then we look again." Normalize the reset.
π When ideas are still forming:
They might think this means "I can just play video games and I'll learn math by magic." Clarify: You have to INTENSELY study the math first (Focus). The magic only happens if the brain is "loaded" with the problem before the break.
π¬ If you want to go deeper:
- Read "A Mind for Numbers" (Barbara Oakley)
- Research "Default Mode Network" (Neuroscience)
- Look up "The Eureka Effect"
Key concepts (for adults): Focused vs Diffuse Mode, Incubation, Default Mode Network, Einstellung Effect, Cognitive Flexibility.