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Liz's avatar

A timely reminder, especially the one about photographing, not seeing. We once were lucky as a family enough to go on a two-day safari in Kenya, at which point we discovered that neither I nor my husband had brought a camera. We had one of those disposable ones which we ran through in about an hour. So the 24 photos we had were all "See that brown blob over there? I think it's an elephant". Then we just looked. That is the most memorable holiday I have ever had. It's easy for me now. I'm retired and comfortably off. But I wasn't always, and the tyranny of the checklist had its death-grip on me for many years. However, something of this approach kept the flickering flame alive throughout. Thank you for this. I love Uncle Alex, and would like to give a big shoutout for "the merely pleasant bits of life", cos those ones rack up.

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Paul M Sotkiewicz's avatar

Brian, this is a timely narrative for me personally. Thank you for contemplating it and writing (out of passion rather than as a check the box exercise). Before I had the responsibilities of being a father, husband, son looking after his aging parents, I used to muse that the whole point of life was about the experiences, travels, people we meet and to be able to tell others about those wonderful things sitting on bar stool. The material stuff simply did not matter. Almost a cross between Jimmy Buffett and Kurt Vonnegut.

I have told my daughter, nephews that the most important thing in life is to do what you love and have passion about. And if you can do that, the rest will open up for you and work itself out. It was the path I followed. Definitely not the path my father or my grandparents would have liked me to take. But the fun thing about that path is the people you meet and the forks in the road that you can never imagine from the current point of “You are here.”

If you told “younger me” what I would be doing for a living in 2023, I would have quipped, “be dead,” or if not that “working in a field I enjoy” not knowing what that would be. The journey, to quote from Buffett’s Last Mango in Paris, “some of its magic, some of its tragic, but I had a good life all the way” is what it is about. The destination will always be a mystery.

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