
My belief in the magic of intuition. The unexplainable phenomenon where one person just sees things in a way different to the great majority, which empowers them in ways unthinkable to the great majority. In this case, however he manages to turn a personal annoyance into something universally hilarious.wait, what belief in magic?
That's the first I've seen of him. Didn't know he was known. Followed a link from someone on twitter.Which show is that from? I've seen all his DVDs but don't remember that one.
It's also a missunderstanding that people can actually 'pick their future'. You can make plans, no doubt, but sometimes things just don't work out that way. Also, it's no as easy to say:These are 2 mistakes people do while picking their future.
First of all, what is worthless? Besides that, I remember when I was in school they used to say you shouldn't become a teacher for example because there are way too many. 10 Years later they're lookin hard for teachers. So what seems "worthless" at a time, doesn't mean it's going to be 10 or 20 years later..... well, it's not that easy to foresee the future.You can pick a worthless track as a secondary degree
First of all, what is worthless? Besides that, I remember when I was in school they used to say you shouldn't become a teacher for example because there are way too many. 10 Years later they're lookin hard for teachers. So what seems "worthless" at a time, doesn't mean it's going to be 10 or 20 years later..... well, it's not that easy to foresee the future.
Exactly. I do believe you should orientated your carreer after your talents rather than after what is told to be 'good'. And even if you'd study philosophy, if you are really good at it you might become a professor on a university and I'd consider that a good job. So go after what you enjoy and what you're good at, that would be my advice. And as mentioned before, since the future is a tricky thing, you might still up in a shitty job.I think the best way is to probably go against the grain, or go crazy and pursue a career you enjoy, rather than base it on financial aspects.