Where Does The Word “Flow” Come From Anyway? - Deepstash

Where Does The Word “Flow” Come From Anyway?

The synonyms for flow are endless: peak experiences, being in the zone, runner’s high, being unconscious, the forever box, etc. Flow is something of a technical term. It emerged from psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi’s early research into the state, where interview subjects—in one of the largest psychological surveys ever conducted— consistently described the experience of flow as one where every decision, every action, flows seamlessly, perfectly, effortlessly. The term “flow” actually describes how the state makes us feel. In short, flow feels flowy.

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FAQs on Flow

FAQs on Flow

stevenkotler.com

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xarikleia

“An idea is something that won’t work unless you do.” - Thomas A. Edison

The process of flow was discovered and coined by the Hungarian-American psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. In the 1960s, Csikszentmihalyi studied the creative process and found that, when an artist was in the course of flow, they would persist at their task relentlessly, regardless of hunger or fatigue. He also found that the artist would lose interest after the project was completed, highlighting the importance of the process and not the end result.

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