project 59/
A BOX FOR "COMPLETING" PROJECTS
V. Sidorchuk, Mechanical-Engineer, Vyazma
As a rule, given any invention, at first the original concept, the first idea, flickers like a spark, then it can later grow, catch fire into a genuine, big project or profound theory, but it can also go out, not having the opportunity to develop. A multitude of reasons hinder the original concept: here are accidental circumstances and the absence of concentration and other matters and concerns which distract us from its further elaboration. In all these cases, the still raw impulse, only committed to paper in ink alone, can be lost, disappear amidst other papers and concepts, simply dry up and die.
The unexpected solution, the project which is outlined below can help decisively in this situation. The discovery, as with a lot of things, came from serious observations of natural processes.
It would seem that the growth process of plants from the soil, the affect of sunshine, water and chemical composition of the earth is already well understood. But in this picture of organic evolution one circumstance is omitted which also affects directly the development of all flora. A seed being in the soil, its change in it and the appearance of a stem and roots, in addition to the named photosynthesis processes, is connected with the reception of high-energy particles of cosmic energy, which has interacted with the earth, directly with its surface, for millions of years. The earth therefore turns out to be infinitely charged with this energy of the cosmos, which serves as one of the reasons for the quick growth of seeds - the first element of any plant. Something analogous occurs, will occur with our project concept. If you only take a flickering project that has already been written down on paper and bury it in the soil and leave it there to rest, then as indicated by observations, after a short time it, of course, in the mind of the inventor, can quickly develop and blossom. Therefore, concepts and plans, when they have only just been written down, should not be kept in the drawers of a desk, but should rather immediately be buried in the ground, in a small box which is placed in the corner, and after a short time remove them from there.
A BOX FOR "COMPLETING" PROJECTS 1. Make a box out of wood or thick plywood (2 cm.) with partitions and attach a bottom to it out of plywood.
2. Paint the box light yellow.
3. Scatter dirt into the box in such a way so that it doesn't reach the edge (cf. sketch).
4. Bury, "plant" into the ground various paper projects so that the edge of each one sticks out and only half of it is in the ground (see below: folders, rolls, notes, boxes, simply separate pages).
5. After all of this has been done, cover the entire box from above with a transparent plastic "roof" (4 cm thick).