Abstract Thinking

Certain moments demand radical departure from normalcy. They may require paying attention to the ignored. Or dismissing the continuously connected. Clarity, perhaps, where once there was only a blur. Or inexactness where precision prevailed. Brief instances of understanding cry out for tangled hours and days of confusion. We think we know what we want or need; we only know what routes we expect, when the unexpected may chart the only viable road to what we sometimes call salvation.

Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstract Thinking—Abstrac

About John Swinburn

"Love not what you are but what you may become."― Miguel de Cervantes
This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

I wish you would tell me what you think about this post...

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.