September 11th, 2025 A newsletter by Anne-Laure Le Cunff
Hello friends,
I’m back in London and slowly settling back into a nice routine, although I’m still jet lagged and have quite a few looming deadlines: an article for Big Think, a script for a TEDx talk, a blog post for reMarkable...
So many creative deliverables in such a short amount of time would have paralyzed me in the past. I’d think: how will I find the inspiration?
But I now have a trusted system for combining ideas in novel ways based on what’s called combinational creativity. This is what we’ll explore this week.
I’m also experimenting with a slightly different format with the newsletter, with one suggested tiny experiment of the week for you to try. I’d love to know what you think :)
Stay curious, Anne-Laure.
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💅 Why Originality is Overrated
We’ve all been there: staring at a blank page waiting for a stroke of genius, only to feel like everything worth saying has already been said.
This feels like a quintessentially modern experience, but humans have been grappling with this kind of creative anxiety for millennia. Ancient Greek poets prayed to the Muses for divine inspiration, hoping Calliope would visit them with fresh ideas.
Even the Old Testament claims that “what has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun.”
The issue is that most people think originality means pulling something completely new out of thin air. I call this mythical creativity.
But research shows that the most groundbreaking ideas rarely come from nowhere. Instead, they’re born from remixing, reframing, and recombining what already exists.
This is what scientists call combinational creativity. Whether it’s a hit song like The Beatles blending country, R&B, and Indian music, or a viral app like Instagram combining photo filters with social sharing, much of what we call “genius” creations are really the result of connecting existing dots in surprising ways.
In a very practical way, understanding this difference takes the pressure off and opens the door to creativity that feels both achievable and exciting – and can lead to meaningful impact.
So how can you tap into combinational creativity? The key is shifting from waiting for that mythical “never-been-done-before” idea to actively connecting what already exists in new ways.
Experiment with these four strategies:
• Keep an idea bank. Collect interesting quotes, questions, stories, facts, and other seeds of curiosity you come across. A note-taking app or a physical notebook both work well. Having an idea bank gives you unlimited raw materials to recombine into original ideas.
• Mix ideas from different fields. Take concepts from one domain (e.g. architecture) and apply them to another (e.g. team design). For example, “What would the Bauhaus architectural principle of form-follows-function look like in team management?” This kind of cross-pollination will increase the actual originalityof your ideas.
• Use prompts to generate combinations. Pick two random ideas and ask: How do these differ? How do they overlap? How could they connect? Most attempts will go nowhere. The magic happens in the 10% that surprise you.
• Learn in public. Read outside your field. Talk to people with different perspectives. Share your half-formed ideas, unexpected connections, and early experiments with others. The feedback will help you see combinations you missed and provide more mental lego blocks you work with.
You don’t need to wait for the perfect idea to show up. You already have memories, questions, and seeds of curiosity.
Start there and approach creativity not as a divine intervention but as an active conversation with the world.
🔬 Tiny Experiment of the Week
Ready to put those ideas into practice? This week’s tiny experiment will help you practice combinational creativity and train your brain to combine unrelated ideas.
I will [combine two ideas everyday] for [5 days]
You could pick a problem you’re working on and combine it with a principle from biology, psychology, or design. Set a timer and allow yourself to play with ideas without judging the outcome. Want to dig deeper? Get your copy of Tiny Experiments.
🛠️ Brain Picks
• Backed by science, Bonding Health’s app blends emotional regulation, emotional granularity, guided imagery, reappraisal, and motivational enhancement – methods shown in meta-analyses to improve mood regulation by up to 40%, reduce distress by 30%, and boost goal achievement by 25%. Download now and feel the change.
• The inbox is full of distractions and too many subscriptions lead to inbox chaos. Meco is a newsletter aggregator built for reading. Move your newsletters to a space built for reading and declutter your inbox in seconds. Time to liberate your inbox.
• You don't need another tool. You need a platform to power your vision. Circle is the complete community platform to build a home for your community, events, and courses – all under your own brand. Book a call with our sales team.
Many thanks to our sponsors and partners for supporting the Ness Labs newsletter! Want to appear here? Please email support@nesslabs.com.
🗓️ Brain Trust
If you enjoy the newsletter, you’ll love our community of curious minds conducting tiny experiments within a safe space and learning together. Here is an overview of upcoming events (full calendar):
• Create space for what you truly want. Join Gosia Fricze for a one-hour self-reflection session where you’ll explore how to let go of what no longer serves you and create space for what matters most. • Learn how to build a life of meaning. In our next author session, Rick Walker will introduce you to his 9-step framework to build a life of meaning, drawing from his 25+ years’ experience in strategy, investing, and global negotiations, and from interviewing some of the most accomplished leaders alive. • Make progress on your projects. Our Pomodoro-based coworking sessions are hosted twice a week by Kathryn Ruge, Javier Luis Gomez, and Joshwin Greene, covering all timezones. Then, join Ashley Crouch and Benjamin Covington for a weekly review on Sunday. • Hostyour own workshop. Do you have an idea for a short presentation and Q&A or a workshop you’d like to trial? Test your first iteration in the Ness Labs community and get feedback. We promote all sessions here in the newsletter.
All of these and future events are included in the price of the annual membership ($49), as well as access to our courses, recordings of all our previous sessions, a dedicated space to track your tiny experiments, and a growing collection of case studies.
Until next week, take care! Anne-Laure.
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