It took may years and many dogs until Vivien Thomas figured out the impossible.

No doctors, at the time, thought that anybody can make a surgery in human's heart and make the patient survive the process. But he did it. He developed the process that allowed to make heart's surgery.

He safely not for those dogs used trial and error to get into the proper technique. Refining, again and again with more perseverance than others doctors (by the way he wasn't one at the time). He had the amount of perseverance needed to figure out how not to do it.

He was an editor of he's own technique because that repetition and exclusion of the error allowed him to select the right thing to do with the right tools to use. He even needed to invent the Blalock's clamp in order to make blue babies syndrome treatable. A needed tool that didn't exist at the time.

The thing is that without making some space for error you only guarantee that there isn't space for improvement. And what you and others think is impossible stays that way.

There is a great quote on this subject:

"If you think you can do a thing or think you can't do a thing, you're right." Henry Ford.

I need to make some room for the experimental ideas that may come. And truth is that I don't know if I'm going to be right. But I'm going to make room as first step. So that's why I'm publishing here my disclaimer.

By the way, I've also hope you figure out how to make some space of your own too. Your great ideas, those that didn't quite reached you yet, are somewhere waiting for your attention too. It's better if they take you prepared.

Well, here it is, I'm making this to be valid for all my writings.

WARNING: highly experimental material