This light is going to make it so easy for
me to record with this giant light.
Look at the size of this thing!
It's gigantic.
So, I was listening to Dear Hank and John
episode today and it related to an image I
came up with through the SquareSpace blog
area, where I used to do that for images last
year.
And it talked about a tapestry of art, of
paint.
And John was talking about, it was with Ashley
Ford, John Green with Ashley Ford.
John was talking about how he sees art as
sort of like a sphere, a white sphere, with
a bunch of people throwing paint onto it and
this kinda relates to my canvas analogy.
Like we all cooperate and see ourselves as
collaborators and creators in this massive
human epic.
We are all able to contribute to a conversation
with our perspective and our ideas and our
thoughts.
That's kinda like the paint that sticks to
the sphere, and sticks to the ball.
That's what i thought about today.
My canvas analogy is like everybody has a
canvas and when you interact with people or
you're kind to people and you love people
and you contribute and appreciate, you contribute
to somebody's story.
You kind of contribute to their canvas or
their novel or whatever image comes to mind.
But that's the one that stuck out today, was
about the sphere and how, I think, John said,
"Art to him is kinda like putting paint on
the sphere which represents the conversation.
Adding to the conversation, adding to the
huge, sprawling human story that we are all
a part of.
So that's my image for you today.
And that's the one I'm going to draw in the
leadership journal tonight because it's eleven
seventeen pm and I don't want this to turn
into this.
I get it up when I get it up, you know?
That's my thought for today.
That's my leadership image.
Keep being you, DFTBA, everybody palka.
Goodbye!
See ya!
Enjoy!
Hope you're enjoying this crazy, human consciousness
world crazy we live in.
Bye!
