I think what happens is that you do the project first, then you think about what it's about. Years later, you figure out why you've done things.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
When I've finished one project, I start thinking about the next.
I think at the beginning of a project, you decide if you're in love with the idea and what it's about, or what you think it's about at that time at least. Then you commit to it, and once you've commit to it no matter what, no matter how many self doubts you have, you're in it. The ship's sailed, you can't turn around.
Thinking is my hobby. But sometimes you get to where you're stuck and you can't figure it out, so you just go work on another project. I always have multiple projects.
Letting a project sit and coming back to it is just as important as working on it all the time. You need to come back to it with fresh eyes.
Every time you do a project, you learn something new.
I usually have one project I'm focusing on but often have many other projects in the back of my mind for several years.
You never undertake a project because you think other people will like it - because that way lies madness - but rather because you believe in it.
I am constantly thinking ahead to what I want to write about in the future, and when I'm done with one project, I give myself a little time and then start the next one.
Some projects go as you hope or imagine, and some change or reveal themselves in a different way; it depends.
But I also think that the more you reason collectively about what the project should be at the beginning of the process, the more you can improvise later.
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