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This is a list of minis and other products I wish for, thus a "wish list," commonly understood to involve wishing for things and getting them, especially if one has a djinni who is obliging and has a credit card especially for fulfilling online wishes, though the wish may also wishfully become into manifestation by complete strangers stumbling upon such a wish list and performing random acts of wishful kindness, or in the case of strangers who are not entirely complete, it may be a random act of compulsive giving anchored in a deep wishful psychosis that persists in ordering miniatures for incomplete strangers of that ilk but, in come cases, may equally be friends and relations who, discovering the wish list either through sheer serendipity or broad hints and a link sent to them by myself, might also fulfil the wish for these products and minis, without it constituting "wish-fulfilment" in the Freudian sense; however, they may not, in which case the list serves only the purpose of wishful thinking and perhaps even magical thinking prompted by a vendor who tantalizes the customer with too many delightful items to afford at any given moment of the timespace continuum, or, as it may be, the wishspace continuum hypothesized by Meyers and Kondaleuski in their lauded paper, "Wishspace and the Internet: A Hypothesis of Wishful Proportions about Wishlists and their Effects on the Psychology of the Miniature Painter and Collector" (Journal of Internet Wishlist Studies, May 2012. Vol. X No. 5) in which the authors wistfully wished for a definition of a possible transdimensional hyposeum inculcating the correspondent material constructs of the wisher equated to the temporal and omnispacial conundrumification of causes independent of, but essentially relevant to, the wishing factor in the collective unconscious or its objective correllatives on an ethereal plane of miniatures and gaming supplements, which was originally suggested by the work of Prof. Anally Toskin-Brant of Queen's University, Canterbury, in a symposium on the effects of spending too much time writing descriptions of wishlists simply because the field given is tremendously, nay, seemingly infinitely, large; which, it may be concluded subsumes all categories of sublime interpercolation within or outside the wish-zone of the wishspace hypothesis (but see Carruthers et al, Speedimentum Studies Vol. 5. No. 122 pages 12-22 and note number 17 op. cit. for corroboration of the calculus, i.e., intersticial theurgometric constraint probabilities, ad nauseum, e.g., this very description.) |