EXTINCTION EVENT I'm chugging along with "Eddie K" #05. I've recorded all of Scene 1, and much of Scene 2 now, and I've got about ten minutes of assembled voice for the first scene, now, as well. I count that as progress. Granted, though, it's not fast. The question of the moment is, does it need to be quicker? Well NEED is a strong word. If you (Or the objective me) need to use it, then the answer is clearly no. There's no hard deadline. And, most of the time, I tend to think that if I work on an extended project every day -- at least a little bit -- everything is copacetic. The issue, I'm convinced, is a matter attention and opportunity. Having the energy and focus to accomplish meaningful work, and having the time to do it when I do have those things. Still, it would be nice to spend four or five hours a day doing this stuff. I'd be able to really bang it out then. But I think that's called "a job". Can't confuse my hobby with my life, right? And yet, what's the point of it, otherwise? This is what I choose to do with my free hours; this is what happens, in this pursuit, when I steal away time that I've perhaps committed to other things. A sneak-thief at the core of my heart. This is what anyone committed to their avocation ends up being, I believe. At it's best, I see this as a question of priorities and scheduling; at its worst, it's selfishness. Most days, it's somewhere in between. But, without these same pursuits, what are we left with? I've known people who retired from work, and dropped dead within a year. They died, I believe, because their work defined them, so without it, they were lost. This is the danger of a life of pure practicality: the act of stopping your professional labors becomes an act of self-destruction. I'm not in that position myself, but in another world, maybe I could have been. To identify so completely with your survival efforts that you miss your life entirely. This philosophy rejects the triviality of the hobbies, and places them in the forefront of life. I mean, if you don't do what you love, at least sometimes, then what are you left with? There's nothing new here to consider, but it is for this reason that I do what I do. It's a matter of survival. (c) 2012 lostnbronx CC BY-SA 3.0 Friday, February, 17, 2012 lostnbronxATgmailDOTcom