As you get older, the questions come down to about two or three. How long? And what do I do with the time I've got left?
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
There are years that ask questions and years that answer.
When I select a topic, it's usually a commitment of two to three years of my life.
We do not ask the right questions when we are young, so we miss the important answers. Now it is too late to ask, too late for the illuminating answers, and the unanswered questions haunt us for a lifetime.
As you get older, you start to really ask questions like, 'Is this the road I should be walking down?,' because every decision seems more final, as you get older.
I think that everyone at any age should ask themselves, 'where do I want to be today, where do I want to be tomorrow, and where do I want to be in a hundred years?' We all have clear answers to those questions. We only have so much time. It's a real shame if we don't spend our lives trying to do that.
With my career, considering my age and how much time I've been out... how much time I've got left, nobody knows.
Every time you do something, make something, it's final in a way, but it's not. It immediately raises a great set of questions. And if you become a question addict, which I am, you immediately have something you need to pursue.
In the past, I always used to be looking for answers. Today, I know there are only questions. So I just live.
With myself, how to pass time becomes sometimes the question - unavoidably, though it strikes me as a thing unspeakably sad in a life so short as ours.
My whole life is waiting for the questions to which I have prepared answers.