I've become wary of interviews in which you're forced to go back over the reasons why you made certain decisions. You tend to rationalize what you've done, to intellectually review a process that is often intuitive.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
One reason I quit doing interviews after years and years and years was because I was making things up.
That's the thing about interviews, at some point you're going to change your mind. But it's there forever and you can't escape it.
My problem with interviews, one day I'll think one thing, and the next day I'll think the exact opposite.
With every interview you feel like you lose a piece of yourself, and with every bad review you become just that little bit more bitter. It is horrible in a way.
Being one of my sources is exhausting. It's not one interview and you're done. I keep going back until I feel like I understand everything.
When you see opportunities in your life, you've got to analyze, 'Why was that choice given to me?'
I don't think of myself as giving interviews. I just have conversations. That gets me in trouble.
I am certainly more interested in interviewing than being interviewed. Sometimes you find yourself attacked from the start.
It's impossible to always get across what I'm trying to say, but, if I just stay honest, then I'm not going to look back on any of these interviews and wonder what I was trying to do or be.
I do interviews because it's a chance to be myself. I sometimes wonder what I could have to say that would be of any interest. I don't have any great wisdom.