Jason,
Well said, well written, really made me think.
Very inspiring for the writing projects on which my brother and I are working!
Chris
Comment by Chris Hollenback on 6/20/2005 @ 8:25 am
Rightly said! For the past many years I’ve been unconsciously conditioned into thinking that it is always safe to move with the herd- to do what everyone else is doing. That’s the only way you will be happy and rich. Sadly along the way I forgot what I truly and deeply wanted from my life. What my true passion was. Now I work and live like a zombie. Gone were the days when I woke up every morning looking forward to do things I truly enjoyed and loved.
But now I’m taking stock of everything around me. From now on I’ll try bringing that passion back in my life. I’ll do things that truly make me jump with joy.
Thanks Jason!
Comment by sameer borate on 8/30/2005 @ 2:57 am
[...] From what I can tell, Noxon advocates a more moderate incarnation of this type of lifestyle, and holds up role models such as Walt Disney, Steve Jobs, and Albert Einstein — all individuals I have hailed on this blog. I got a chance to see an interview of the author by Bill Maher on Amazon.com. It was fairly adversarial (Bill was actually pretty rough on the guy), and somehow, I found myself agreeing with both of them at different points. Basically, here’s how I come down: I am against the stupid Adultitis-stricken PC patrol who insist on ruining childhood as we know it. And I think every. single. person. could benefit from injecting a little more childlikeness in their life. However, I have continually drawn the line between being "childlike" versus being "childish." [...]
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Steve Jobs, the CEO of 
