- solomon
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- bringing life to ideas and ideas to life
bringing life to ideas and ideas to life
manifestation via prototyping

There's this quantum space where every possibility exists right now.
Every app on your phone, every product you use, every system that works—these all started as possibilities in someone's mind.
Someone reached into that quantum field and decided to manifest that specific version of reality.
The universe is constantly creating itself through conscious beings who choose which possibilities become real.
They had an inspired vision and they willed this vision into existence.
Every alternate reality, every alternate universe, every simulation of an idea you've ever had—they're all there, waiting.
Every iteration of your business concept. Every version of that creative project. Every solution to the problem you're working on. Infinite variations, all existing simultaneously in this field of potential.
Your ideas aren't just mere thoughts but glimpses into possibilities of what could be. But they'll stay glimpses forever unless you do something about it.
prototyping
If you want to manifest something quickly, the fastest way is to prototype it out.
This is about reaching into that field of possibilities, of ideas, of what could be, and putting it into physical form.
The moment you take an idea from your head and put it somewhere external—notes app, sketch, voice memo—you've selected one possibility from infinite options and given it life in this reality.
That's manifestation in its purest form.
Ideas trapped in your head exist in that quantum space forever. They remain possibilities, not realities.
But here's the thing about ideas—they're given to you, you get a chance upon them. By just keeping them in your head in the realm of possibilities without giving them life, they'll eventually float to somebody else's realm of possibility. And if they so choose, they'll manifest this idea out before you.
That's why it's important to give ideas life if you're actually convicted upon them. But of course, conviction also comes from prototyping these ideas out to see whether they serve your purpose or not.
the prototype spectrum
Once you've pulled an idea, you can evolve it:
Realm of possibilities → notes → rough draft → minimum viable product → reality people can use
Each step is another act of manifestation. Each iteration makes the idea more solid, more real in this dimension.
Business idea? Create a landing page. Creative concept? Make a rough version. Process improvement? Test it for a week.
You're manifesting. You're selecting which reality gets to exist.
the fallacy of the “ideas guy”
You see, people always have ideas.
I can't tell you how many people are the "ideas guy" but they're by far one of the most useless contributors to any project or organization.
Ideas are cheap, execution is priceless.
Executors are the purest form of manifestors. They are those that take these raw possibilities from their heads and bring this out to life. Refining it and wrestling it through real life feedback and ultimately creating something beautiful.
The last thing we want is to be stuck as an idea person but with nothing to show. Everyone has ideas but the ones who have something to show for it are those that act on them.
The best idea guys I believe are those with at least enough execution skills to give that idea life. Perhaps they don't have the ability to bring it to completion but giving it just enough life to take its first breath so that the rest of the team can nurture it to adulthood.
And I believe the best entreprneuers are those.
You don't want to be just an ideas guy. You want to be a manifestor. Someone who creates beautiful things. Someone with work to back up their vision.
To manifest something, you have to bridge the gap between the quantum field and physical reality. You have to give the idea some form of life.
Start with the simplest thing: write it down. Sketch it. Record yourself explaining it.
Even better, “vibe code” it out.
Suddenly, what existed as pure potential now exists as something you can see, touch, improve. Something real.
feedback loops as your life-force
Yet with that said, not every idea is a good one. Or at least starts out good.
The hard part is knowing which ideas are good ones. And the worst part is that a majority of the time, you'll only know by acting on these ideas and getting feedback on them.
You don't need perfect ideas to start. You turn them into something beautiful by putting them out, stress-testing them with feedback in the real world. That's how good ideas are actually formed.
manifest through action
Pick an idea that's been floating in your head. Any idea.
Put it somewhere outside your mind. Give it the simplest possible form minimally.
Even if you choose not to turn it into something bigger, at least it's given a form in the real world.
That's how you turn infinite possibility into actual reality.
That's how you manifest.
The quantum field holds every version of your future. The one you prototype is the one that becomes real.