Now I'm going to give you four very important reminders for to make sure the process will go really well. First of all, number one, when you combine your talents with a creative ingredient, make sure that you don't produce connections that describe something you already know, the connections have to add something new. For example, if you combine the challenge of the back with this picture, you may say, Oh, alright, the connection is that you know, the back has to be has to make you feel relaxed, you know, has to be comfortable, or Well, you already knew that that's nothing new. That's not good enough. Okay, the connection has to add new value. Number two, the connections that you create will be more typical and predictable if you work with creative ingredients that are also familiar untypical.
So you have to make an effort to combine with ingredients that are as unusual and as original and different as possible. If I combine with this ingredient is not As good as if I combine with something completely unexpected, like these hamburgers here, you know, I visualize the hamburgers, the cooking the temperature, and then I begin to think of a fabric that reacts to temperature and is something much more creative. Okay, number three is very difficult to begin with connections that are very generic. And that's okay. No problem. For example, when you see this Well, okay, I want the back to somehow provide help with a useful actions of everyday life, very generic, no problem.
But then you have to continue the process, working with more ingredients to refine and go into more and more detail, adding more detail to that idea. And the last one, the Swan Lake session, the key of the whole process is the combination of different visualizations, baby's relaxation of your challenge, and they destroy isolations triggered by all these creative ingredients, all these images, videos and everything, the combination of different visualizations, these two are lies very good. Let's continue