We live in a culture that worships ideas, but I’m frequently left stewing in my ideas and getting nothing done. If knowledge is power — and if ideas are supremely important — why do we have so many educated people with brilliant ideas who achieve little or nothing? For me, that’s been a painful question at times.
I grew up with a supreme confidence in ideas — and a supreme confidence in my own ideas. Actual execution was an afterthought for me. When you’re young and nobody expects that much out of you, just a halfway decent execution of your ideas is almost always enough to impress people — and doing that made me happy.
As I got older, though, a funny thing happened. In the adult world, execution matters more than ideas. In so many of the things I did as a child and as a teen-ager, the good idea was enough to carry the day. Teachers and other adults were impressed. “He’s going to do great things one day,” they’d say.
Looking back, I see that the times when I accomplished anything with my ideas, it was always when I had a partner who was working closely with me. The pattern was always the same. The ideas and inspiration were mine. The practical incentive to turn the ideas into reality — to actually finish what I started — was in the more practical partner working with me. At the time, I didn’t know why I needed that. I understand now.
It’s when we create art — and create a better world — that we’re most like our Creator
‘Good enough’ isn’t enough if you want a relationship that will last
Is there life on Mars? Is there love? Where can we find what’s missing?
No matter how ‘defeated’ you are, there’s a way to transform yourself
California pays $205,075 to move shrub that typically sells for $16
FDA’s war on margarine is really an attack on your freedom of choice
I’ve been sent to Facebook jail — and nothing about it makes sense
When Demopublicans and Republicrats clash, you lose
Just underneath a civilized veneer, savage conqueror lives in my DNA