Try Blinkist to get the key ideas from 7,500+ bestselling nonfiction titles and podcasts. Listen or read in just 15 minutes.
Get started for free
Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma
How Play Shifts Our Thinking and Sparks Creativity
Playful by Cas Holman emphasizes the importance of play in fostering creativity and innovation. It examines the intersection of design and play, encouraging us to embrace playfulness as a powerful tool for personal and professional development.
On dunes near Walvis Bay in Namibia, researchers discovered something remarkable: fifteen-hundred-year-old footprints from children herding goats or sheep. These ancient tracks tell a story – they zigzag and loop, sometimes showing just heels, sometimes just toes, evidence of kids hopping and skipping as they worked. Why does this matter? Because those playful movements weren’t part of the job. Nobody told them to skip. Nobody gave them points for hopping. The children chose to move this way simply because it felt good. Here, preserved in sand, we see free play woven right into daily labor.
So, what exactly counts as free play? Think of any activity you choose yourself, direct yourself, and do purely because you want to. No finish line waiting for you, no trophy at the end. When those conditions are present, attention sharpens, experimentation feels safe, and the experience becomes worthwhile on its own. A practical way to reach that state is by opening up your sense of what’s possible – and to start measuring success by how engaged you feel, rather than what you have to show for it.
It turns out your brain actually needs this kind of play to thrive. Scientists have watched what happens when animals grow up with toys, obstacles, and playmates versus those stuck in empty cages – the playful ones develop bigger, more flexible brains. Take play away, and animals practically explode toward it the second they get a chance. That’s how fundamental this need is.
For humans, getting absorbed in play creates flow, that magical state where tough problems suddenly seem solvable. Studies back this up – people in a light, humorous mood perform much better on hard puzzles, and when you remove pressure to perform or win prizes, creativity flourishes.
Play shapes our social world too. Think of it as a practice arena where you can test out different roles, experiment with communication styles, and learn to manage your emotions – all without real consequences. Therapists know this, which is why they use play to help people uncover buried feelings, shift perspectives, and rewrite painful stories with better endings. The laughter that bubbles up during play literally reduces pain and calms anxiety. And when groups play together openly, something powerful happens: communities bond, especially when times get tough.
Yet most adults can barely remember how to play. From our teenage years onward, we’re trained to produce, compete, and watch ourselves constantly. Our calendars fill up, screens take over, and our definition of fun shrinks down to almost nothing.
This gap between our fundamental need for play and our adult reality is the central problem we have to solve. The way back starts by fundamentally changing our perception. We must first relearn how to see the world not just as a series of tasks to be completed, but as a palette of opportunities for engagement.
Now that you understand why this matters, you’re ready to learn the first skill of a genuinely playful mindset: how to spot the possibilities already hiding in your regular moments.
Playful (2025) argues that free, open-ended play is a mindset and daily practice that unlocks creativity, lowers stress, and strengthens connection. Drawing on psychology, design, and lived examples, it offers practical prompts and environments to help individuals and teams build playful habits at home and at work.
It's highly addictive to get core insights on personally relevant topics without repetition or triviality. Added to that the apps ability to suggest kindred interests opens up a foundation of knowledge.
Great app. Good selection of book summaries you can read or listen to while commuting. Instead of scrolling through your social media news feed, this is a much better way to spend your spare time in my opinion.
Life changing. The concept of being able to grasp a book's main point in such a short time truly opens multiple opportunities to grow every area of your life at a faster rate.
Great app. Addicting. Perfect for wait times, morning coffee, evening before bed. Extremely well written, thorough, easy to use.
Try Blinkist to get the key ideas from 7,500+ bestselling nonfiction titles and podcasts. Listen or read in just 15 minutes.
Get started for free
Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma