Re: If I knew then what I know now…
A letter to the Flamenco-playing kid in the glasses…
Hey Kid*,
I’ve been asked to give myse…er, you something of a short head’s up on a couple of things to incorporate into your assemblage of philosophical and intellectual tools. I will Capitalize and Bold them. With judicious application, they should set you up for a decent swing at the few strikes that you get in your scientifically expanding three-score-and-ten. I misse…er, you don’t seem to be headed in the directions that will expand your opportunities as you become decrepit like y…er, I have, so here is a little list. Write these down in that gray plaid notebook where you’ve filled in each square with pencil-drawn ideas for paintings, yeah, the one with the poetry for Juli K H on the black inside the cover; oh, and as a side note, paint more than one of those, will ya? Y…er, I’m gonna like the way the one you do turns out, even if you didn’t.
The first thing I want to go ba…er, for you to do is to Attend Social Functions where you are not part of the choir, band, crew, cast, etc. although parties after any such event held by those organizations will do. Do not, I repeat, do not go or stay within two feet of a wall or doorway unless you are passing through the door. If all you risk is your own pride, Take Social Risks. Do not risk the pride or reputation of others, that is their own option. Smile when you meet people and ask their name. Practice taking “not interested in talking to you right now” as something that happens, like dropping your napkin; There are Other People and Other Times, you Just Keep On. Move to another area and try again.
Plan, (yes the evil P word) Trips to Places That You Want to See/Experience, whether or not you can get anyone else to go. Do this as often as possible; you never know when that possibility might >poof< vanish overnight.
About maintenance: you know those Lists you hate? The ones that you have to uncrumple from that little wad when you discover that you’re not actually going to get to spend any time at the summer recreation program, seeing anyone from school? Here’s another approach. Take a look at the tasks on the list. Aside from the bi-quarterly moving of the firewood pile, those are all things that build up because no one is assigned to do them as ongoing chores. If you keep your eyes open and tackle a couple of the less enormous ones for a half-hour or so each day or every other day, you will find they never become major “everything on this list has to be done before school starts in three months” items on The Lists. Break the Task Down into Manageable Parts. You’ll wonder how it was things didn’t get done before.
I have to get going, so as a general rule for all of the interests you may develop, and you’ve heard this once from Granddad, but I see it didn’t sink in, Take the Risk of Failure, particularly in areas in which you have the most creative ideas. If this means entrepreneurship, so be it. Find a teacher, find a mentor, but find out what you need to know to make an idea fly and risk making a buck, most people see the point in making money. And if you fail, Study Failure Until it’s Understood, and Forgive Yourself Your Mistakes. Then, you Just Keep On again.
Oh, just one more thing, no matter where you are, or what you’re doing, Be There In the Ongoing Moment with all your might. Keep your …focus.
Be happy kid, I hope these are useful to you,
Cheers,
A friend
* we were never all that close

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