I once needed to turn my water stop-cock off, but it was down a narrow, three foot hole in the garden. I had a long enough tap key but I couldn’t reach the tap because it was buried in soil that had fallen in the hole. I decided that I didn’t need to dig it out, just break up the impacted soil in order to reach the tap. So I got a long spike and put it down the hole but stopped when I heard a loud squeak. Peering down the hole I saw a small frog or toad at the bottom (don’t ask me what it lived on). My problem was how to remove the frog using stuff I had to hand, without harming it (a key criterion).
It was too deep for my arm and all the wacky ideas I had didn’t have a hope. How could I remove the frog? (perhaps you could send me your ideas before you read further), I am very practical, but I failed to come up with single a plausible idea.
A few days later I was talking with friends and mentioned my problem. My friend’s wife instantly came up with a workable solution. Not only was it a workable solution, it was absolutely brilliant, true genius!
The interesting point was that my friend’s wife knows nothing about frogs, engineering or mechanics. She was a theatre nurse in a hospital. Apparently, in operations, surgeons sometimes need to remove small pieces of tissue that have been cut off, so they use a small tube connected to a suction pump. Her suggestion was to use my vacuum cleaner (with a four feet long tube) and pick up the frog with the suction. Needless to say it was a complete triumph, though the frog did seem somewhat bemused.
The point is, my logic had completely failed, I would have come up with a laboured, cumbersome, scrappy solution, but someone with a completely different background and perspective had come up with a brilliant, effortless, low-cost, original and simple solution.
Perhaps we should think about who we include in the discussion when dealing with difficult problems.
Showing posts with label originality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label originality. Show all posts
Tuesday, 24 August 2010
The frog problem.
Labels:
creative solutions,
ideas,
originality,
problems
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