If the year 2000 can help us move into the future, that's fine, but I am afraid that people see it as a full stop and that one can take a big breath afterwards - you can't.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I think 2020 can still be my time.
I wrote this book, '2030,' and I was careful in the book not to overdo the future because I don't think it comes that fast.
In my view, you can't go to the future if you haven't come from the past.
If you think you know where you're going to be 10 years from now, that's where you're at now. You're just putting it off.
Once you have mastered time, you will understand how true it is that most people overestimate what they can accomplish in a year - and underestimate what they can achieve in a decade!
I've always liked to think ahead. Not stupid-far ahead. A hundred years doesn't interest me. But 20 years interests me, and more for what happens to humans as opposed to things.
I think in order to move forward into the future, you need to know where you've been.
The future's come and gone; it's a thing of the past. That once impossibly exotic expression 'the year 2000,' for so long evocative of silver suits and robots in pinnies, now feels antiquated.
Instead of looking at the past, I put myself ahead twenty years and try to look at what I need to do now in order to get there then.
If you spend too much time wondering what you're going to feel like in year five, you're not going to feel anything in year one.
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