There are no great ideas.
They are as common as light.
Spread across the mind ascents
around the planet,
whether those ideas
go any further than thought
is dependent upon a vast array
of other factors
that must come into play
before the process of thought
put forward
can occur as great ideas.
So much of circumstance
contributes to the frame
towards the outpouring
of initial ideas into the ethers,
either as thought-form shared
or more deeply articulated,
seeking manifestation.
How, “great ideas”
come to have a context
is in the first person.
These unknown ideas
field a representation
by a hidden process
of small events
which becomes the sequence
that yields to others
the heralding of a “great idea”.
Great ideas are served
on a listener’s platters.
There is no strained effort
in audience needed or involved,
for each word forward
invites then the next.
The rigor of intake
is from pensive to exhilaration.
Parts of thoughts,
previously not introduced,
find magical comprehension
as recognition’s fast friends.
“It is as if I always knew that
but never thought to think of it,”
would be an honest response.
“Great” says more
about the person in receivership
than it does about the idea itself
but that personal affect
appears deferred
to speak to yet another
about a then “great idea”.
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