I’m not advising people to drop their items in an attempt to discover new uses for them
Yes, you are not.
This should have prompted me to search harder for a way to use it more effectively.
I think ‘dropping things’ is one, perhaps inefficient, way of doing that.
And it makes a good metaphor. If you try things differently, or try new things, they might not work the first time. (Or ever—we remember the Apollo missions, and the Wright Brothers because they succeeded.)
Dropping items in an attempt to discover new uses for them, drawn out over 27 lines:
If you take something apart, you might learn.
But it might break.
So if you dropped it and it broke would that be really inconvenient, or easily replaced?
If something falls it might break.
There might be an opportunity to learn.
To put the pieces back together well.
But there is risk in things falling.
And breaking.
Sometimes they break forever.[1]
There is less risk in taking things apart.
But we don’t do it very often.
And sometimes we stop before finishing, because we’re afraid of breaking things.[2]
But if something is easily replaced
And we’re not afraid of breaking it
Then we might learn something by taking it apart.
If it breaks it breaks.
If we learned something, we learned something.
If we learn a better way of doing or making things, we learn a better way of doing or making things.
Is a broken thing too high a price to pay?
For knowledge?
For a chance to learn a better way?[3]
[1] You might have to learn, how to make glue (red link).
Yes, you are not.
I think ‘dropping things’ is one, perhaps inefficient, way of doing that.
And it makes a good metaphor. If you try things differently, or try new things, they might not work the first time. (Or ever—we remember the Apollo missions, and the Wright Brothers because they succeeded.)
Dropping items in an attempt to discover new uses for them, drawn out over 27 lines:
If you take something apart, you might learn.
But it might break.
So if you dropped it and it broke would that be really inconvenient, or easily replaced?
If something falls it might break.
There might be an opportunity to learn.
To put the pieces back together well.
But there is risk in things falling.
And breaking.
Sometimes they break forever.[1]
There is less risk in taking things apart.
But we don’t do it very often.
And sometimes we stop before finishing, because we’re afraid of breaking things.[2]
But if something is easily replaced
And we’re not afraid of breaking it
Then we might learn something by taking it apart.
If it breaks it breaks.
If we learned something, we learned something.
If we learn a better way of doing or making things, we learn a better way of doing or making things.
Is a broken thing too high a price to pay?
For knowledge?
For a chance to learn a better way?[3]
[1] You might have to learn, how to make glue (red link).
[2] If this isn’t you, then this...isn’t you.
[3] Even if it takes more than one thing broken?
Until you find a way
to put it back together.
Until you find, another way/how, to use it.