I was caught with the phrase, ‘I was thinking well past it,’ appearing in May 25’s New York Times’ article, titled “How I fell for Lisbon.”
The text reads:
I met Lisbon in a snit. I was exhausted and impatient and thinking well past it, to the northern Portugal city of Oporto and the wine country nearby, my ultimate destination and real interest.
I understand ‘think well past it’ here means that the author’s thought jumped to Oporto, skipping Lisbon.
As I was unfamiliar with the expression, “think past something.” I looked for it in the headword of ‘think’ in Cambridge, Oxford online dictionary and OALD. None of them registers “think past something.”
I think I was confused with the insertion of ‘well’ between ‘think’ and ‘past,’ which can be interpreted both ways of ‘think well’ and ‘well past’
Is “think past something” an idiom like ‘go past (oneself)’, or a plain verb + adverb combination?
Best Answer
I don't think it is an idiom, but it is used routinely enough to be understandable. As you surmised, to think past something means to think beyond something, to jump to the next thing, instead of spending time on the "something" currently in front of you.
Also, to think past yourself means to think of things other than yourself. For example, in this Utah State Today article:
As you figured out, in your example, the traveler was ready to dismiss Lisbon because she wanted to be gone from there and travel on to what she thought was the much-more-interesting destination of Oporto. So she wasn't giving Lisbon any thought at all, but was instead already anticipating Oporto. By looking ahead to what was coming next, she was missing out on what was right in front of her.