This convenience writer emphasizes the need for hope.
She recognizes that the ability to hope may take a while to acquire, and that the path toward its acquisition may be difficult to traverse.
The writer calls this hard-earned hope a pretty addition, notifying her readers of her belief in the long game.
She also confirms her belief in the luckiness of the number three. This belief does not originate within the convenience community; it has been constructed and propagated throughout many cultures in history.
The writer seeks to console, which presupposes some sadness or pain.
A Dream of Consolation
Hope is a pretty addition;
hope both long and steep, an addition of three aspects,
three being lucky.
The first point is imagination in dreams.
The second and third close upon revealing and residing in a transformed possible future.