sxPlasticity
Virgin
- Joined
- Jun 2, 2023
- Posts
- 77
Context.
These various thoughts - now loosely woven - will pose a question, but they will do so without much context
To answer the question you must suggest ways you might give the answer context... For your answer is what gives the question context when you are given a subject and have to create a context around it... Or perhaps create a context and then put a subject within it...
I told you it was loosely woven...
If you like action, creating context seems to me to be one of the more boring parts of writing a good story.
On the other hand, a good story needs to be set in some context to make it make sense.
Consider the following context...
A slave tied up on railroad tracks with a fully loaded freight train barreling right at them... Somehow it's not the same when a loving Mistress accidentally forgot where she put the key... Compared to one who deliberately forgot the key... Or maybe if there was no Mistress, and the slave deliberately chained themselves down as such all alone...
But then consider the context the subject... Yes, to be clear, I say, I say consider the context now to be the subject ... That is, consider the context now to be the subject... just to put the context in some kind of context...
Now you see a big difference if the train tracks were on a Broadway stage... compared to those along a curve on a snowy mountain ridge... Or maybe it all suddenly seems to make sense when you wake up to realize it was all just a dream...
So now row, row, row your boat... Think a conscious stream...
Tied upon the railroad tracks... what is happening?
As your dreaming are you screaming?
In what context does it come?
And to what ending be your dreams portending?
What dream you do you dream right now?
Tell me what does conscience bring?
Do you still find context boring?
I kind of do... Looking at you or me tied up on the railroad tracks... Wondering how you brought me here... What the fuck is happening? And do we end this thing to get what we want?
Hmmm...
Any ideas?
There is only one rule: Railroad engineers need not respond.
These various thoughts - now loosely woven - will pose a question, but they will do so without much context
To answer the question you must suggest ways you might give the answer context... For your answer is what gives the question context when you are given a subject and have to create a context around it... Or perhaps create a context and then put a subject within it...
I told you it was loosely woven...
If you like action, creating context seems to me to be one of the more boring parts of writing a good story.
On the other hand, a good story needs to be set in some context to make it make sense.
Consider the following context...
A slave tied up on railroad tracks with a fully loaded freight train barreling right at them... Somehow it's not the same when a loving Mistress accidentally forgot where she put the key... Compared to one who deliberately forgot the key... Or maybe if there was no Mistress, and the slave deliberately chained themselves down as such all alone...
But then consider the context the subject... Yes, to be clear, I say, I say consider the context now to be the subject ... That is, consider the context now to be the subject... just to put the context in some kind of context...
Now you see a big difference if the train tracks were on a Broadway stage... compared to those along a curve on a snowy mountain ridge... Or maybe it all suddenly seems to make sense when you wake up to realize it was all just a dream...
So now row, row, row your boat... Think a conscious stream...
Tied upon the railroad tracks... what is happening?
As your dreaming are you screaming?
In what context does it come?
And to what ending be your dreams portending?
What dream you do you dream right now?
Tell me what does conscience bring?
Do you still find context boring?
I kind of do... Looking at you or me tied up on the railroad tracks... Wondering how you brought me here... What the fuck is happening? And do we end this thing to get what we want?
Hmmm...
Any ideas?
There is only one rule: Railroad engineers need not respond.
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