Le premier degré de la folie est de se croire sage; le second, de le proclamer.
~ Proverbe italien Et j’y arrive jusqu’à un certain point
Mais ensuite je quitte l’appartement
qui devraient être ici.
Do what you love, people!
À découvrir, drôle, brillant, dans le mille :
http://www.savagechickens.com/gettingstarted
Lisez son parcours…
Même ordre d’idée :
http://artdanstout.blogspot.fr/2014/07/creativite-et-labeur-selon-cohen.html
From Zen in the Art of Writing; Ray Bradbury
“We should not look down on work nor look down on [our early works] as failures. To fail is to give up. But you are in the midst of a moving process. Nothing fails then. All goes on. Work is done. If good, you learn from it. If bad, you learn even more. Work done and behind you is a lesson to be studied. There is no failure unless one stops. Not to work is to cease, tighten up, become nervous and therefore destructive of the creative process.”
A lifelong advocate of doing what you love, Bradbury ends with a beautiful disclaimer for the cynical:
“Now, have I sounded like a cultist of some sort? A yogi feeding on kumquats, grapenuts and almonds here beneath the banyan tree? Let me assure you I speak of all these things only because they have worked for me for fifty years. And I think they might work for you. The true test is in the doing.
Be pragmatic, then. If you’re not happy with the way your writing has gone, you might give my method a try.
If you do, I think you might easily find a new definition for Work.
And the word is LOVE.”
Source :
http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2014/07/16/ray-bradbury-work-failure-love/
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Meilleur Haïku (5/7/5) pour mon pseudo :
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J’aime écrire pour rien…
Les choses qu'on fait pour rien ont le plus de valeurs...
RépondreEffacerMon compte est bon alors! :-) :-)
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