The optional-skills copy was still the v1.0.0 constraint-dispatch skill (SKILL.md + full-prompt-library.md only). This brings it up to the current tool: a situation-routed library of 22 named ideation methods drawn from working artists, scientists, designers, and writers. SKILL.md becomes a 4-step router (extract PHASE/DOMAIN/SPECIFICITY signals → apply overrides → route phase-then-domain → resolve ambiguity), with anti-slop operating rules and an anti-default check. Adds: - 22 method files under references/methods/ — oblique-strategies (Eno/Schmidt), oulipo, scamper, lateral-provocations (de Bono), triz (Altshuller), leverage-points (Meadows), pattern-languages (Alexander), compression-progress (Schmidhuber), analogy-and-blending, pataphysics, first-principles, polya, biomimicry, volume-generation, creative-discipline, premortem-and-inversion, defamiliarization, derive-and-mapping, affinity-diagrams, jobs-to-be-done, story-skeletons, chance-and-remix. Each: when/when-not, the actual cards/principles/operators, a procedure, a worked example, anti-slop notes. - references/method-catalog.md (index + when-to-use), heuristics.md (extended decision tree), anti-slop.md (rules applied to every output), exercises.md (time-boxed exercises). - full-prompt-library.md restructured into domain-affinity sections (general / software / physical / social / lists) so the no-direction default isn't developer-biased. Frontmatter: name aligned to directory slug (creative-ideation, folding in the fix from #18084); version 2.0.0→2.1.0; platforms field preserved. Original wttdotm-derived constraint dispatch is kept as the default path. Supersedes #19295 (which targeted the pre-move skills/ path). Co-authored-by: SHL0MS <SHL0MS@users.noreply.github.com>
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Creative Discipline
Practices for sustained work over weeks and months, not single-session ideation. Four traditions:
- Twyla Tharp — The Creative Habit (2003). The box, scratching, the spine.
- Sol LeWitt — Sentences on Conceptual Art (1969). Instruction-as-work.
- John Cleese — 1991 Video Arts lecture. Open mode vs closed mode.
- Julia Cameron — The Artist's Way (1992). Morning pages + artist dates.
When to use
- Long-term creative project; the question is sustainability, not "give me an idea"
- Globally blocked, not locally (Oblique Strategies for local; this for global)
- Producing the same thing over and over — scratching imports new material
- You want to convey that creative work has conditions
Don't use when
- User wants an idea in the next hour (these operate over weeks)
- User is annoyed by self-help registers (Cameron especially)
Tharp — three working tools
The box. A literal banker's box per project. Label it the moment you commit. Everything related goes in: clippings, music, references, sketches, source materials, postcards. The box is the project before the project is the project.
Scratching. Active daily search for ideas — read, watch, observe with no agenda except proximity to ideas. "You can't just sit there waiting. ... I read for general purposes, looking for something interesting."
The spine. The one sentence naming what the project is about. Held privately. Not the pitch — the spine. When the project drifts, return to it. Examples: "this is about a lost child", "this is about the body's memory of grief".
LeWitt — instruction as work
The work is the instruction, not the execution. Wall Drawing #289 is a sentence; the wall executions are not unique works. "Once the idea of the piece is established in the artist's mind and the final form is decided, the process is carried out blindly."
For ideation: produce a work as an instruction. Anyone can execute. This unlocks instructions for performances anyone can perform, recipes for events, scores anyone can play, code anyone can run.
A few of the Sentences on Conceptual Art (1969):
- Irrational thoughts should be followed absolutely and logically.
- Conceptual artists are mystics rather than rationalists.
- Once the idea of the piece is established and the final form is decided, the process is carried out blindly. There are many side-effects that the artist cannot imagine. These may be used as ideas for new works.
- It is difficult to bungle a good idea.
- When an artist learns his craft too well he makes slick art.
Cleese — open mode
You need closed mode to do the work, but you cannot generate in closed mode. Open mode requires:
- Space — a place where you cannot be interrupted.
- Time — 90 minutes minimum.
- Time — repeated. (Cleese says "time" twice deliberately. You have to also tolerate the duration.)
- Confidence — to make a mistake without immediate self-criticism.
- Humor — Cleese is emphatic. Solemnity is the enemy.
Most "I have no ideas" problems are actually "I haven't made the conditions for ideas". Make them.
Cameron — morning pages and artist dates
Morning pages. Three pages, longhand, stream of consciousness, first thing in the morning. Don't reread for 8 weeks. Mechanism: discharge the surface static of attention onto paper. What remains is the substance.
Artist date. Weekly, festive, solo expedition to explore something that interests you. Two hours minimum. Strange or playful. Not for productivity — for filling the well.
Both are required. Morning pages without artist dates produces grim self-disclosure with no replenishment; artist dates without morning pages produces input with no metabolizing.
When to recommend which
| Situation | Recommend |
|---|---|
| Project-specific, just starting | Tharp's box |
| Project drifting | Tharp's spine |
| Globally low input | Tharp's scratching, Cameron's artist dates |
| Globally blocked | Cameron's morning pages + artist dates (12-week program) |
| Has the desire but no conditions | Cleese open-mode setup |
| Wants to make works that others can execute | LeWitt instruction-as-work |
| Same idea coming over and over | Tharp scratching, dérive (see derive-and-mapping.md) |
Anti-slop notes
- These are practices, not techniques. Don't pitch as quick fixes. Benefit accrues over weeks.
- Don't generate fake LeWitt sentences. Use the real ones.
- Don't fake Cameron's tone if it's not yours. Use the practice without the language.
- Avoid the "celebrity morning routine" trap. These four traditions are about specific named practices with specific mechanisms — not lists of habits.
- Don't prescribe more than two practices at once. Pick one or two; let them take.
Sources: Tharp, The Creative Habit (Simon & Schuster, 2003); LeWitt, "Sentences on Conceptual Art" (0–9 No. 5, 1969); Cleese, Video Arts lecture (1991); Cameron, The Artist's Way (Tarcher/Putnam, 1992).