When I think of genius the first thing that comes to mind is the Genius Bar at the Apple Store. That delightful marketing tool where one of those Apple geniuses will tell you what is wrong with your Iphone.
I think Genius and I think of people like DaVinci, Einstein and Mozart. I think of exceptionally high IQs and strokes of brilliance that change the face of the earth.
I don’t think of it as an aspect of a person’s character and I certainly don’t think of me.
According to Merriam Webster there are five different definitions for genius. Number 5 is the only one I have paid attention to. That genius is someone of extraordinary intellect and mental superiority with a very high IQ.
Now I have a decent IQ, howevered I have pretty much ignored the other four definitions.
Especially the one that refers to a marked capacity or aptitude for something. A distinctive identifying spirit. A personal genius. The genius within. My genius.
I’ve been engaged in reading and discussing this word alot lately. Steve Pressfield in The War of Art writes that genius is our unique gift that we were born to be. Whether it is art or writing or designing the next great computer software program. Seth Godin in Linchpin writes of the lizard, aka our personal resistance and how it hates our genius, trying to quiet it at any cost.
Both suggest we all have a genius. The thing is to first find what it is and then decide what to do about it.
In The Big Leap Gay Hendricks talks about living in our Zone of Genius, how few of us identify what that is and settle instead for our Zone of Excellence. I’ve lived in my Zone of Excellence for a long time. I’ve had two successful careers. But neither played fully to my genius.
This time I’m turning up the volume on my genius. Care to join me at the Genius Bar?
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