Sunday, January 23, 2011

This process of compacting, speeding up, to be more effective is increasingly successful. The most important aspect is to question every empty space. And to fill it. Unless of course there is benefit in it being empty. I think I agree with David Walsh from MONA on the primary element of daily life being a constant collision of largely random outcomes.


“I’m anti this idea that we know what we’re doing with certainty. I kinda think that most things that are good happen to people largely by accident, but then they start looking for explanations.
“You see the views of rich, successful people on television, and they tell you why they got rich and successful; they don’t interview all the people who went through the same process and didn’t. I think most things are complete crap. I want to show that you can be fortunate without believing that your fortune was anything other than fortune.”

Good for you sir. It matters not whether you a driven by a fierce belief, or by trying to fill an emptiness. Just be driven, and let others progress as they please (but if they need a lift it doesn't hurt to offer...).