How Does From Linear to Lateral: Unleashing the Power of Non-Traditional Thinking Work?

Imagine you have a long, skinny pencil, that’s linear. Now imagine turning it sideways so it becomes wide and short, that’s lateral.

From Skinny to Wide

When something is linear, it goes straight like a line, think of a pencil or a ruler. But when it changes to be lateral, it spreads out, like when you lay the pencil across your palm instead of holding it up.

This idea, going from linear to lateral, helps things work better in some cool ways! For example, imagine you have a rope that’s long and skinny. If it breaks easily because it's thin, but if you make it wide (like a band), it might not break as quickly. That’s non-traditional thin, not just thin, but smartly thin.

Unleashing the Power

Think of this like building with blocks: stacking them tall is linear, but spreading them out side by side is lateral. Sometimes being wide and short helps you build stronger or faster things, just like how a wide river can carry more water than a narrow one.

So, turning from linear to lateral unlocks new ways of working, like making things stronger, faster, or cooler! Imagine you have a long, skinny pencil, that’s linear. Now imagine turning it sideways so it becomes wide and short, that’s lateral.

From Skinny to Wide

When something is linear, it goes straight like a line, think of a pencil or a ruler. But when it changes to be lateral, it spreads out, like when you lay the pencil across your palm instead of holding it up.

This idea, going from linear to lateral, helps things work better in some cool ways! For example, imagine you have a rope that’s long and skinny. If it breaks easily because it's thin, but if you make it wide (like a band), it might not break as quickly. That’s non-traditional thin, not just thin, but smartly thin.

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Examples

  1. A sheet of paper that stretches out sideways instead of just getting longer
  2. Paint that spreads like water when you shake it
  3. A fabric that changes shape from straight to wide

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