When disruption hits we often look for stability. A clear answer. A way back. But what if the way forward isn’t clarity or control, but creative tension?
We define creative tension as the space between our greatest opportunity and our greatest challenge. It’s not just a stretch or a gap—it’s the living edge of change. The zone where possibility hasn’t yet hardened into certainty, and where the work of transformation is real and alive.
It’s also a place most of us want to avoid. That’s because creative tension isn’t comfortable. It’s not polished and it doesn’t promise immediate payoff. But when the world no longer works in the way it’s supposed to, creative tension is not just a strategy—it’s a necessity.
Creative tension thrives on three key conditions:
- Clarity of the Signal
In disruption, the noise is overwhelming. There’s fear, urgency, contradiction, and fatigue. The work is to tune into the signal—to discern what’s actually happening beneath the chaos. What is the real challenge? And what opportunity is quietly presenting itself? - Courage to Experiment
This is the moment that matters. Do we freeze, or do we test? The key is not having the perfect plan—it’s having the willingness to run small, intentional experiments that begin to reveal what’s possible. The record producer Rick Rubin puts it best: “The impossible only becomes accessible when experience has not taught us limits.” - Commitment to the Feedback Loop
Every experiment creates a reaction. Watch it. Learn from it. Let it sharpen your understanding of both the opportunity and the challenge. Then try again. Creative tension isn’t a one-time leap. It’s a virtuous cycle of testing, reflecting, and refining.
Rubin encourages us to think of this process like tending a garden:
- First, you plant your seeds—small, doable actions that explore what might grow.
- You observe. You learn. You let some seeds go and plant new ones.
- You water what starts to take root.
Over time, something previously “impossible” becomes not only possible, but vital. The experiment becomes the strategy.
In times of disruption, it’s tempting to wait for certainty before we move. But the future is not waiting. The organizations and communities that thrive in ambiguity are the ones that learn to lead from inside the tension.
That’s where change lives.
That’s where possibility begins.
That’s where the work is.
Note: This post references (and is inspired by) the thoughts and ideas of record producer Rick Rubin and his wonderful book: The Creative Act: A Way of Being