My curiosity
is returning. For quite a few months
after my accident I was just plodding along, getting by, not thinking very much
about anything new or different. But now, as my brain heals itself, I find I am
beginning to look around me again, and starting to wonder about things.
It feels great!
When I say curiosity, I
mean the eagerness and desire to find out about new things. I mean inquisitiveness,
an interest in strange and different experiences, a sense of excitement at
finding the unexpected. I mean asking
questions that start with “Why…..?”, “What if…..?” or “I wonder whether…..?”
We are all born
with a sense of curiosity. Just watch any baby or small child looking around,
eager to explore and try something new.
The Greek
philosopher Aristotle told us ‘All men by nature desire to know’. Without it we would never learn anything,
never develop our potential. Albert
Einstein said ‘I
have no special talent, I am only passionately curious’.
And it turns out that curiosity is good for our mental health, our wellbeing.
The American psychologist Barbara
Fredrickson reminds us how important our positive
emotions are, because they increase our range of thoughts and actions. Curiosity
sparks the urge to explore. Joy sparks the urge to play. Contentment sparks the urge to savour and
integrate. Love sparks a recurring cycle of each of these urges within safe,
close relationships.
Broadening our minds in
these ways, through exploration, play, savouring or integrating, promotes
discovery of new and creative actions, ideas and social networks. These in turn
build up our personal resources and provide lasting reserves for us to draw on
if life gets difficult again.
Curiosity is effective against fear of the different, the unknown. And it’s a much healthier (though sadly less common) response to the different than prejudice.
Alexander von Humboldt was
a brilliant, but very anxious 19th century German explorer. He overcame his fear and worries by unceasing
curiosity. He made discoveries in an unparalleled range of sciences from botany
to geography. He used his curiosity to
break down the barriers of prejudice and increase his enjoyment of life. He was a pioneer of global thinking, whose
reward was to feel in touch with the entire earth.
You know the
old saying ‘Curiosity killed the cat’? Well,
if you look into its origins, it turns out to be just the opposite. The
original saying was ‘Care killed the cat’, where the word ‘care’ means worry,
sorrow or sadness.
So we should
turn this upside down, and say ‘Curiosity cured
the cat’. I wonder what you’re wondering about just now.