There are days you go by trying new ideas. Then there are days where you just want to know what needs to be done to just finish it off. When there are days when you’re confused between the two, you’re your worst enemy. You know how I learnt that? Table of contents This image is an actual representation of my mind, the chaos and my surroundings at the time. Paper cuts aside, the material offered ideas on the go to build relevant objects for my imagined future classroom. I had ups and downs on my detailed phase, where I would cut each book for the bookshelf with patience, to barely getting paper cuboids right. I spent a lot of time perfecting the staircase, and guess what, here it is. Staircase The point is, I got through it making what made sense to me the most then. Speculative design, in my experience offered a large scope for imagination keeping the scale in mind. There was room to go as wild as Harry Potter to extract school experiences and make the classroom I’d like to learn in! And we browsed through memories, experiences, and movies along with what would fit 2100 better. And the limit was nothing, really. Ideas, seeming ridiculous can often be toned down to fit the context, provided you’re open to exploration. That’s where making helps. I think every idea evolves from a point that made an impact in our head, and to extract it is to see more potential, have more energy and be more open to failing.
Self observation: Can’t choose between tasks when each of them seem to be similarly challenging.

The point is still remains to move forward anyway, because time does. And maybe fixing something unfinished is easier than doing it from scratch.