Page 27 - Think Like a Champion
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                                                      DONALD J. TRUMP
                                 wipers caught his attention and he applied what he heard to his
                                 musical compositions. He has had a significant influence on con-
                                 temporary music, and I think he’s a great example as an innova-
                                 tor. Sometimes new ideas can come from something as mundane
                                 and functional as your windshield wipers. The key is to pay at-
                                 tention and keep your brain and senses open to new stimuli.
                                    It also helps to be thinking of two things at once—multilevel
                                 focusing is what I call it. The intersecting of ideas is when inno-
                                 vation will follow—thinking in musical terms while listening to
                                 your windshield wipers, or thinking of a hotel tower and condo-
                                 miniums at one time, or maybe watching a stone roll and imagin-
                                 ing a wheel. Who knows what will result? Sometimes it will be
                                 fantastic and other times it won’t, but it gets the mind working in
                                 new dimensions that can sometimes prove fruitful.
                                    This can also happen without deliberately attempting to be
                                 innovative, so the other technique to employ—consciously and
                                 unconsciously—is to keep an open mind. That’s very important in
                                 business as well as in the creative arts. Don’t limit yourself to staid
                                 thinking because you want to excel in business. My first book was
                                 called The Art of the Deal because I view business deals as being an
                                 art form. Maybe that’s why I’ve been a successful dealmaker. I em-
                                 ploy both sides of my brain when I’m thinking and working.
                                    You may be aware of the number phi (pronounced “fee”),
                                 which has an astonishing history. It’s been employed by people
                                 from Pythagoras to da Vinci, and most likely the builders of
                                 the pyramids used it as well. It’s been around for a long time and the
                                 number itself is 1.6180339887. It’s called the golden ratio, and if
                                 you want to know more specifics, you can read The Golden Ratio
                                 by Mario Livio, who goes into great detail about it. My point is
                                 that it appears that some people use the number deliberately, and
                                 other people know it subconsciously and it can appear in their
                                 work with or without intention. But it can be used intentionally,


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