Thank you!
Your support is sustaining the future of local news in our communities.

Everyone can, and should, invent

Invention comes about in a myriad of ways. Your Inventive Mind explores them and puts them to work.

You can invent what you perceive to be a need, personal or societal, your own need or someone else’s need. You can invent by “fooling around� with thoughts, ideas, things, objects.

You can invent by putting together two or more ideas, or things that at first glance seem to have nothing to do with each other. You can dream about what “I wish I had� and that marvelous quality, your imagination, will fill in the gaps quite often.

You can invent by responding to some irritant or obstacle in your path with alternative ways of overcoming or getting around it. You can invent by exchanging ideas and thoughts with others and when you are perceptive enough to hear things that no one else seems to hear. You can invent in numerous fields — technical, artistic, physical, recreational, educational, culinary, child rearing, adult rearing — and in just about any of your life pursuits. Your opportunities for invention are endless.

    u    u    u

Some inventions end up as patent applications in the U.S. Patent Office, or in patent offices around the world in other countries. Often patents are issued. Some inventions might be submitted to the patent offices but never make it.

An invention might be an idea, a thought, a written description, a physical thing — something that is new for you. Regardless of the fact that anyone else might have had the same idea someplace, or a similar idea. If your idea is a new one for you, then you are an inventor.

If your idea has not been thought of by anyone else, you are an inventor and that invention might merit a patent, a trademark or perhaps a copyright. Strictly speaking, “inventions� are divided into two forms when you apply for a patent. You might apply for and receive a mechanical or a design patent for your idea, mechanism or design.

Trademarks are specific designs for labeling a product or a company and you see them all around you: the General Mills “Big G�; the N.B.C. “Peacock� on T.V.; the name “Sony� on Japanese-made electronic equipment; etc. Copyrights apply to printed materials such as articles, stories, books, movies, musical compositions, newsletters such as mine, Creativity In Action.

    u    u    u

As a child, it might have been easier for you to have been an inventor than it might appear to be now. Almost every thought you had as a child was new to you — was an invention. Your imagination, at first, knew no bounds. Then when adults told you that one of your ideas was silly or “childish,� old hat, or just plain worthless, you learned to keep some of those imaginative thoughts and ideas to yourself. You often might have heard the word “don’t.�

As time went on you learned that in many situations, if you curbed your fertile imagination, it caused you to have less trouble and you stayed in the “safe area� of already known ideas. Your ability to invent declined markedly. You might not have realized it. You were growing old.

If you are one of those fortunate children whose parents and family responded favorably and positively to your flights of fancy and inventions, it is much easier for you to be an inventor now, as an adult. You still remember how to dream and how to be fancy-free.

If not, however, you can surely recapture those childlike qualities of curiosity and imaginative thinking and action. And when you do, you are entitled to feel very good about any idea or invention you think of, whether one other or a million of others have thought of it, too.

    u    u    u

It will take a little courage and a little or a lot of practice for you to think creatively frequently. Based on my experience, I am sure and convinced that you can do it. It is often useful to make notes and to write down something about an idea that you have in order to continue to be able to see it and deal with it. Inventors love to make notes of their thoughts and that helps them carry their ideas through to completion.

An inventor may be referred to as a person who doesn’t look at life the way it was yesterday, but the way it will be tomorrow. That’s the way that Harry Freeman, the inventor of the fastest hamburger-forming machine in the world, put it.

I have had experience teaching in high school and college and with people who attended my seminars on creativity, helping them think about inventing. Many people feel that an inventor is a freak or magical figure who can dream up brand new ideas from nothing, and that they themselves are incapable of that. My interest has always been to change their attitudes and points of view. The fact is that almost everyone at some time or another thinks up a way of doing something that is different and better than the usual way.

Pick something that you would like to do or to be better than it is now. What might have to be done with it in order to accomplish that change? Take as much time as you want. Don’t worry about the conclusion. Give yourself a chance to act and think like a youngster again. It will make you feel good and you will probably dream up some new ideas. Develop your Inventive Mind.

Sidney X. Shore is a scientist, inventor and educator who lives in Sharon and holds more than 30 U.S. patents.

Latest News

Early morning Kent crash sends car into ditch, disrupts traffic on Rt. 341

A blue SUV remains in a ditch after an early-morning crash along Segar Mountain Road in Kent May 27.

Ruth Epstein

KENT – A driver escaped with minor injuries after an SUV crashed into a utility pole and water line before rolling into a ditch along Segar Mountain Road early Wednesday morning, May 27, disrupting traffic for much of the day and affecting water service to a nearby residence.

The single-vehicle crash occurred around 4:30 a.m. near 36 Segar Mountain Road, just under half a mile east of the intersection with South Kent Road. State police said the blue SUV struck the pole, went over a guardrail and came to stop in a roadside ditch.

Keep ReadingShow less

Pauline King Garfield

Pauline King Garfield

EAST CANAAN — Pauline K. (King) Garfield, 94 of 77 South Canaan Rd. formerly of East Canaan, died Sunday May 24, 2026, at Geer Village.She was the wife of the late Duane Garfield who passed August 14, 2017. Pauline was born April 3, 1932 in North Canaan, CT in the former Geer Hospital. She was the daughter of the late Charles and Rose (Van Vlack) King.

Pauline spent her career at Becton Dickinson in Canaan, after being a stay-at-home mother for many years.She was employed at Becton Dickinson for 23 years. She enjoyed bus trips with her late husband Duane to the Casinos, spending time with her family watching the grandchildren grow up. Recently she made a comment to care givers that was “wait until I see that husband of mine for leaving me here, I am going to read him the riot act.” Over the years she enjoyed many crafts, but her favorite was crocheting gifts for everyone.

Keep ReadingShow less
A blessing for pets — and a lifeline for their health
Lazarus, a Eurasian eagle owl, poses with Dr. Laura, his longtime handler. The rescue raptor — known as the event’s “wow factor” for his striking presence and six-foot wingspan — will appear as the Raptor Ambassador at Rhinebeck’s Blessing of the Animals.
provided

For many pet owners, animals are family. On Saturday, May 30, that bond will be celebrated in a uniquely practical and heartfelt way when the Blessing of the Animals returns to Third Lutheran Evangelical Church in Rhinebeck alongside a free rabies vaccination clinic hosted by Hudson Valley Animal Rescue & Sanctuary.

The event, scheduled from noon to 4 p.m., is free for Dutchess County residents and open to dogs, cats and domestic ferrets three months and older. While the clinic itself provides an important public health service, organizers say the day has become about much more than vaccinations.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Local filmmaker Yonah Sadeh takes his lens to China

Filmmaker Yonah Sadeh on a shoot last year in New York City.

Matt Kashtan
When I was around 12, a family friend showed me how to use my family’s computer...from that point on, it was pretty much all movies. — Yonah Sadeh

Filmmaker Yonah Sadeh of Falls Village left May 8 for China, where he will shoot a short documentary.

“I got into a documentary film intensive program where we have two weeks to shoot, edit and screen a 10-minute documentary about a topic of our choosing,” he said.“I’ll be in Changsha, Hunan, making a film about a fifth-generation shadow puppet master.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Silvano Monasterios wows packed Cornwall Town Hall audience

Silvano Monasterios thrilled a sold out audience in Cornwall.

Natalia Zukerman

Grammy-nominated pianist, composer and producer Silvano Monasterios performed works from his upcoming “Solo in Paris,” his seventh album, on Sunday, May 23 at Cornwall Town Hall to a packed audience. Presented by Music Mountain in partnership with the Cornwall Town Hall and Cornwall Library, the concert showcased Monasterios’ signature fusion of sophisticated jazz harmonies and vibrant Latin rhythms. Throughout the performance, he moved seamlessly between intricate compositions and spontaneous improvisation. The concert built excitement for Music Mountain’s upcoming summer jazz series, which will bring an array of acclaimed performers to the historic venue. For more information, visit musicmountain.org

Author Courtney Maum to discuss new novel at Norfolk Library

Norfolk Library celebrates the release of Courtney Maum’s latest novel, “Alan Opts Out,” with a book launch party Tuesday, June 2, at 5:30 p.m. The author will speak about her book in conversation with WAMC radio producer Sarah LaDuke.

A graduate of Brown University with a degree in comparative literature, Maum is an acclaimed author of five books, including the romantic comedy “Touch,” a New York Times Editors’ Choice and NPR Best Book of the Year; “Costalegre;” and “I’m Having So Much Fun Without You.” Her memoir, “The Year of the Horses,” was chosen by the TODAY show as top pick for Mental Health Awareness Month. Vanity Fair listed her author’s guidebook “Before and After the Book Deal,” as a best resource for writers, and she has an eponymous Substack newsletter.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.