There is an interesting fact about an idea, and that is the way it can grow. Haven’t you ever watched your own ideas grow? Doubtless you can remember having an idea, and then, a little later, having another that added something to the first and seemed to fit right in with it. Often in the course of time this little idea that began as a tiny bit of an embryonic thought developed into a full-sized, grown-up plan.
It is one of Nature’s wonders that whenever you are possessed by an idea which reinforces a previous idea, an additional spurt of energy is released with it to help in its development.
It is advisable to act on your ideas as soon as they are ready, for if idea energy is kept in storage, as it were, it loses its freshness and might be said to dry up into nothingness. You start doubting if it is really as good as you first thought it was. You begin to wonder if you have enough experience to work it out, if someone else isn’t better qualified. Once an idea begins to get this kind of treatment only a miracle can keep it alive.
To be sure, prompt action is not always feasible. Excellent ideas have been delayed for years. Should yours be one like this, put it away if you must, but don’t forget to bring it out frequently to keep interest alive. Keep it aerated, moist and fresh.
As an example of delayed action on ideas, take the case of E. M. Statler, the great hotel man. More new hotel ideas came from him than hotels had ever heard of in all their history. And these ideas, many of them, came to him as a young boy long before there was anything he could do about them. As a youth, he had a job as a bellboy and one of his more tiresome duties was running up and down stairs with ice water for guests. So he had the idea of piping ice water into every room. The brightness of this was not only having the idea, but also having the wisdom not to tell anyone about it. He did not confide in the other bellboys. He did not tell his boss. He kept it strictly to himself. So it was sensational when years later he piped ice water into the rooms of his own hotel. Other ideas he carried around for years were a private bath with every room; face-cloth and free paper shoe bags in every room; typewriter loaned to guests on request; bed head reading lamps, and many other new ideas.
Your ideas can prove to be equally valuable so don’t throw them carelessly around and give them away right and left. When you get an idea that fills you with enthusiastic energy, bottle it up. Don’t tell a soul. Think about it and work on it, but keep quiet vocally. If you must have information that necessitates talking to someone, talk, but don’t tell him why you need the information.
Why should we be so insistent on this point? There are good reasons. It is because, for one thing, talking is action. If you have an exciting idea which fills you with energy, then you go into action via words, you use up the idea energy for nothing. It’s all gone by the time you stop talking about it. To do real work on the idea after that, you have to draw on your ordinary quota and this turns what should be fun into work.