Drawdown Period
#big-ideas
Creative breakthroughs rarely emerge from constant work. C.G. Suits, General Electric's chief of research, observed that most laboratory discoveries came as hunches during relaxation—after intensive thinking and fact-gathering.
Military strategist John Boyd formalized this insight through what he called ==the "drawdown period"—a time of "stillness and raw silence" marking the beginning of his convergence process.== After initial breakthroughs, Boyd would spend weeks examining an idea from every angle before beginning actual work.
Author Ryan Holiday applied this principle before writing one of his books, setting aside two months with no reading or researching—just thinking, processing, and digesting. "This provides time for us to clear up mental bandwidth to start creating," Holiday noted. The approach creates space for the Creative Unconscious to work, eventually signaling when it's time to begin. For Holiday, that signal came earlier than expected, pushing him to start writing nearly two weeks before his planned date—a reminder that the mind, when properly rested, knows when it's ready to create.