Here’s My Idea

by educ95si

We all have plans for how things could be better. We have exciting ideas for the perfect restaurant and movie,  how to re-decorate the living room, or how to improve sales figures. More often than not, others have ideas of their own and when we pitch our idea to the rest of the folks it doesn’t quite pack the same punch for them as it did for us. In the worst case scenario they think its an awful idea. In the average case we arrive at some sort of compromise. Its a process of negotiation that is always playing out in any collaborative environment. In the improvisational setting, every idea is “good.” Which is not to say that it will benefit us in some way but it is good in that it is worth our attention. Sharp improvisers pay attention to every idea that is thrown out as if it was gold, the best idea that could possibly have been generated at that point. No idea is ignored, judged, debated, just totally embraced and built upon. In a traditional setting, everyone’s ideas are collated and each idea is analyzed and compared. Rational analysis and comparison are somewhat antithetical to improv. In improvisation, we want to take the first idea that comes up and totally go with it. It then becomes the property of the group as a whole, not only the person who came up with it. The group as a whole then adds to it and shapes it working together as a unit. For this, it is also important for hte idea-generator to not become attached to their idea and instead be delighted in how it changes and morphs. These are two central skills in improvisation. To accept every idea if you are receiving and to immediately let go if you are generating.