When you spin a globe and point to a city and actually go to that city, you build an allowance of missed opportunities on the back end.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When you're on a merry-go-round, you miss a lot of the scenery.
What's important to me is offering perspectives into worlds that people don't often get to see. Do you know what I mean? From angles they don't often get to see.
Travel gives me the opportunity to walk through the sectors of cities where one can clearly see the passage of time.
Sometimes it's necessary to go a long distance out of the way in order to come back a short distance correctly.
It takes a while for executives to understand that every company is a spatial company, fundamentally: where are our assets, where are our customers, where are our sales. But when they get it, they light up and say, 'I want to get the geographic advantage.'
Opportunities are like sunrises. If you wait too long, you miss them.
All the privileged can travel, see different worlds; not everyone can. I think it is important for people to have an interesting locale nearby.
I started going back and forth, New York, London, New York, London. I wasn't looking back at all. I was doing tons of jobs. Working, working, working, working.
When I'm traveling the world, I don't ever look anymore at the geography - just enough to catch galleries and paintings.
Maybe I am skipping over the city and going from very personal things to the world, from internal experience to giant, far-away-from-space experience.