MyDoorsAreOpen
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2003
- Messages
- 8,549
I've heard it said that good people are seldom great people, and vice versa. I've heard people ask questions like "Why can't an honest politician win?" and "Why does the entertainment world attract such backstabbers?" It seems to me that if having your name and face as widely known as possible is your ultimate goal, there are just more devious ways to make this happen than non-devious ways, and restricting yourself to the non-devious ways is only handicapping yourself.
I guess I just don't naturally have a lot of what would be called, in the traditional sense, ambition. To those of you who do have a little more of it, I'm curious: Is the drive to be great, to be number one in something significant, something that you have a philosophical justification for? Or is it something intrinsically pleasurable to you, requiring no explanation? Is it the practical advantages of being "somebody" that you seek, for yourself and your descendants? Or is it more the existential validation?
I think I could accept being famous or powerful if I just "fell into it", that is, if I just ended up with this as an unsought side product of doing what I was passionate about. I wouldn't gloat over it, and would be wary of it, but I think I could accept it and even enjoy it. At the same time I'm fully accepting that if I never "sell out" in some way or another, I likely won't ever be famous or powerful. What I don't think I could ever accept is notoriety bought by compromising my principles and abandoning my true passions.
What do you guys think about famous people, past or present, who've served as inspirations to a lot of people? Were the dirty deeds and neglected relationships it probably took them to get to a microphone heard 'round the world a good justification? Oprah Winfrey comes to mind. I don't know much about her personal life, but I'd bet she had to step on some toes to be able to champion a lot of the noble causes she has. What, then, of the many people who play the political games with all the necessary heartaches they need to inflict, only to never make it to the public eye? Was it worth it for them to try, because it worked for someone like Oprah?
I guess I just don't naturally have a lot of what would be called, in the traditional sense, ambition. To those of you who do have a little more of it, I'm curious: Is the drive to be great, to be number one in something significant, something that you have a philosophical justification for? Or is it something intrinsically pleasurable to you, requiring no explanation? Is it the practical advantages of being "somebody" that you seek, for yourself and your descendants? Or is it more the existential validation?
I think I could accept being famous or powerful if I just "fell into it", that is, if I just ended up with this as an unsought side product of doing what I was passionate about. I wouldn't gloat over it, and would be wary of it, but I think I could accept it and even enjoy it. At the same time I'm fully accepting that if I never "sell out" in some way or another, I likely won't ever be famous or powerful. What I don't think I could ever accept is notoriety bought by compromising my principles and abandoning my true passions.
What do you guys think about famous people, past or present, who've served as inspirations to a lot of people? Were the dirty deeds and neglected relationships it probably took them to get to a microphone heard 'round the world a good justification? Oprah Winfrey comes to mind. I don't know much about her personal life, but I'd bet she had to step on some toes to be able to champion a lot of the noble causes she has. What, then, of the many people who play the political games with all the necessary heartaches they need to inflict, only to never make it to the public eye? Was it worth it for them to try, because it worked for someone like Oprah?