After each experience, you grow up, you get enriched with something, and you don't know how you're going to be in six months, you don't know what you're going to want, what you're going to need.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I think there's a lot of learning process in figuring out what things you want to do and shouldn't do. Maturing in that way is something that comes with experience and time.
After a while, you just don't do things you don't wanna do - that's the great freedom you get, the older you get. You learn what to do and what not to do, and what will be a waste of time and what won't be a waste of time.
When you've done something for more than a third of your life, your whole adult life, and then all of a sudden you're going to have to switch off and say, 'No more,' you want to grasp as much of it and enjoy the last few years of it as much as you can. Because you can't get those years back.
Experience is what you get when you didn't get what you wanted.
I think you grow up every year, every day. You learn something new and try to really worry about what's important in life.
As you get older, you're always maturing, you're always learning something new about yourself.
If I can't affect some change in six years, maybe I'm in the wrong place.
If you start thinking about retirement in six months' time, you're already there.
Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it.
Even in between takes, you emerge yourself. So you don't have a life for six months.