James Taylor (00:09) Somewhere, over the Indian Ocean, I found myself wide awake. I was flying home from Chennai, India, where I’d just delivered a keynote and workshop for senior leaders from a pharmaceutical company. It’d be one those energizing days where the conversations backstage are just as interesting as the ones that actually happen on the stage. But now, it was the early hours of the morning. The cabin lights were dim. The only sounds were from the gentle hum of the engines and the occasional clink of a coffee cup from the galley. I had my notebook nearby but in that moment I wasn’t writing, I was listening. In my headphones was Bano Maria, the debut album from Catriel and Paco Amoroso, an Argentinian duo I discovered a few months before on NPR’s Tiny Desk Show. Their live performance had blown me away. Their music is an alchemy of influences. Experimental trap music from Latin America, hip hop from the USA, European EDM, London drum and bass, jazz and pop. It’s chaotic on paper, but in their hands, it’s seamless, alive. As I sat there at 3 a.m. on that plane, I thought about how quickly ideas travel today. A sound born in Buenos Aires can influence a beat in Berlin on the same day. A breakthrough in a Bangalore lab can shape a product in Boston before the week is out. The speed of cultural exchange is unprecedented. But here’s the thing. You only notice those patterns when you give your brain the space to connect them. At 3 a.m., on a flight, you’re not rushing between meetings or staring at your inbox. You’re untethered. Your mind becomes a DJ booth, sampling from the influences that you’ve been collecting, books, conversations, mistakes, even music you didn’t understand the first time that you heard it. This is what neuroscientists call diffuse mode thinking. When your brain isn’t under pressure to solve a problem, but it’s still working, quietly making connections in the background. The truth is, great innovators are cultural DJs. They’re fluent in multiple creative languages, and they’re willing to combine them in ways that might look reckless to someone else. But that’s where the magic happens, in those combinations. So here’s my challenge for you this week. First, Expand your playlist, fill it with ideas, sounds, and perspectives far outside your normal reach. Second, protect your offer hours. Don’t fill every gap with your phone. Let your mind wander. And third, when you create, remix on purpose. Combine those influences until you’ve made something that surprises even you. By the time the cabin lights came up for breakfast, I’d filled my pages in my notebook. Some ideas were ready to use. others needed time to marinate. A few made no sense at all. And those are often my favourites. The best ideas don’t always knock on the door during office hours. Sometimes they arrive quietly, half way between yesterday and tomorrow at 35,000 feet. So, when’s the last time that you had your own 3am idea?