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Sunday, January 4, 2009

Coming to Being

The path from A to B may seem rather linear to an observer, however, within the individual making the thought journey, it is not.  Any simple act elicits a domino effect within using all prior knowledge, wishes, and goals for the approach.  I can’t speak for others, but within self, one object branches off into literally thousands of whole scene scenarios which depict connections, possibilities, negs/pos, probabilities, and alternatives which in themselves go into breakdown categories to outcomes.  Then again, there are times when A comes about, but not thought upon.  No plan is made.  More so the feat is accomplished in baby steps as each one is new.  The bridges are crossed when gotten to.  Only then do the branches come into play as to how to apply knowledge.  If I had to diagram one thought, it would look like a speck center with numerous virtual spokes going in wheel shape then each spoke breaking off into other branches and more branches and even more branches.  Imagine trying to write all that out?  The speed at which it all runs is too vast.  Many of the runnings overlap, tie in, twist, and head off into other directions.  YET the focus is not lost.  Imagine yourself sitting in front of a wall with for example 50 mini television sets and each running something different and you must pay attention to each one.  That would be rather difficult if all are running at once each playing something different.  Within mind, one does not have to view as such and can keep all data and branches in order.  Let’s say you want to do A while thinking about R, M, and Z.  Think of something simple then think of all the steps that you have to make to do A and all possible substeps.  Create a substep list.  Now look at your substep list.  Do you have steps within each substep?  How many super-substeps does it take to make a substep?  Think computer and directories.  Mind you I am not throwing in alternate and various factors as that would twist this simple supposedly linear design.  Moo ha ha! ~ Maggie ~ Penned ~ January 4, 2009 @ 10:33 a.m. EST

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