
The annoying truth behind every great idea
Ever felt that slight friction when a bold idea starts to form — that internal tug-of-war between what you imagine and what’s actually possible? That’s creative tension. It’s uncomfortable, often inconvenient, and absolutely necessary.
In my experience, the most original ideas rarely arrive quietly. They show up mid-argument, in the fog between clarity and chaos, when everyone’s just a little off balance. Instead of treating that discomfort as a warning sign, what if we saw it as proof we’re onto something?
Creative tension takes many forms. Sometimes it’s the gap between vision and reality — the dazzling idea versus the messy first draft. Sometimes it’s the clash between people, one pushing for wild originality, the other for practical execution.
The easy move is to compromise early — tone down the boldness, mute the dissent, aim for harmony. But the magic often lives in the argument itself. Research backs this up. Teams that engage in healthy debate, rather than avoid it, tend to produce more inventive outcomes. Conflict, when handled with care, forces us to think deeper and combine perspectives in new ways.
Of course, not every argument is noble. There’s a difference between fighting for an idea and fighting to be right. The goal is constructive tension — passion without ego. The best teams I’ve worked with have an unspoken rule.
Disagree all you want, but don’t make it personal.
Ambiguity is another flavour of tension.
Creative tension is energy. Mishandled, it burns you out. Channelled, it becomes magic.
For the Pragmatists:
- Discomfort is progress. If it feels too easy, you’re probably still in the safe zone.
- Argue the idea, not the person. Passion is great, ego is poison.
- Create safety. People share with better ideas when they’re not bracing themselves for ridicule. So be kind.
- Stay in the mess. Why not? Clarity shows up late to the party, usually after you’ve wanted to give up.
- Tension is magic. Don’t defuse it — just, direct it.
Lisa Misu is a creative at Out of the Square, please avoid eye contact with her.