Ideas do not always come in a flash but by diligent trial-and-error experiments that take time and thought.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Ideas sometimes come from nowhere, and sometimes they take lots of thinking.
To begin with, you must realize that any idea accepted by the brain is automatically transformed into an action of some sort. It may take seconds or minutes or longer - but ideas always produce a reaction of some sort.
Most intuitive ideas have to be clarified, so there is a trial and error process.
Every suggested idea produces a corresponding physical reaction. Every idea constantly repeated ends by being engraved upon the brain, provoking the act which corresponds to that idea.
The faster you can get your ideas in contact with the real world, the faster you can discover what is broken with your idea.
Ideas emerge when a part of the real or imagined world is studied for its own sake.
The best way to investigate the elusive phenomenon called the creative process may well be to target all the misconceptions, to explain what the creative process is not.
Ideas come from somewhere. People don't come up with these ideas from nowhere. Something triggers your thoughts.
Too often new ideas are studied and analyzed until they are suffocated.
Ideas move rapidly when their time comes.