April 13, 2009

the thing is…

change%20the%20world%20558.jpg
[From a recent post on Twit­ter.]
Now ain’t that the truth…?
I guess the argu­ment still remains, what does “Chan­ging The World” actually mean?
Does it have to be something huge, like Bill Gates star­ting Mic­ro­soft, The Beat­les relea­sing Sgt. Pep­per, or Nixon bom­bing Cam­bo­dia?
Or can it be something more modest, like ope­ning up a really cool inde­pen­dent books­tore in a small town in Far West Texas that really could use one?
There’s no right ans­wer.
It all depends on what you truly, truly love. “Mea­ning Sca­les”.

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8 Responses to “the thing is…”

  1. Hugh,
    Thanks for sha­ring the Twit­ter com­ment, your post and remin­ding me that my mun­dane is what it is — per­so­nal, ongoing and satisfying

  2. Farhad says:

    When they are young they say “I want to change the world”. When they get old, they wish they had chan­ged them­sel­ves :)
    I like your posts very much, espe­cially “Ignore Every­body”. Good job.

  3. Daniel Edlen says:

    Can they be one and the same?
    Peace.

  4. kristo says:

    nice, Hugh…
    as always…
    if we can just truly find our­sel­ves…
    that chan­ges everything…

  5. Pilotlight says:

    What does “Chan­ging The World” actually mean? — Inte­res­ting phi­lo­sophi­cal ques­tion and one which the Greeks, Chi­nese and other great thin­kers have been searching for an ans­wer to for a very long time. Guess it opens up many ideas on whose world you are loo­king to change – your own or someone else’s? And which of the two is more powerful?

  6. RKR says:

    I get the image of meteors (ideas) hit­ting the earth. Some burn up in the atmosphere, some make it to earth — and then a big one! ;)
    I am sure I have not chan­ged the world, but I have chan­ged a few minds, and pis­sed a few peo­ple off.
    …Pro­bably no Nobel Prize in that.

  7. Mayson Lancaster says:

    James Fallo­wes had some good thoughts about this local/global world chan­ging tra­deoff recently, when his father died.
    See http://jamesfallows.theatlantic.com/archives/tiger_jim/ for those thoughts and more.

  8. jenn says:

    Makes me think of the ope­ning line of The Depar­ted, “I don’t want to be a pro­duct of my envi­ron­ment. I want my envi­ron­ment to be a pro­duce of me.”