"Age of Wonder": what would you imagine this to look like?
What would you imagine our world to be or people to be like, or things that they would pursue or think about? What would the Age of Wonder look like to you?
Lance Watson
@lwatsonjrΒ Β·Β 4:40
Hey, Seeking Plum. This is Rebel Jay. Thank you so much for the invitation to this swell cast. The Age of Wonder. I have a very vivid imagination, and through this I've learned to express myself through the illustration of the inner workings, the thoughts, and for lack of a better word, imaginings that I have through use of illustration by words
And if we didn't put things into boxes and so on, if we could embrace and flow with the uncertainty of existence, would there be chaos? Or at least not in the way that we know it or might define it today, but maybe it would look different, because chaos is only what's not orderly, right? And if we embraced the uncertainty, the fluidity, the wonder of it all, maybe there wouldn't be chaos. Or maybe that's crazy notion. I don't know
I love this sort of catalyst that kickstarts this age. It creates a like a sort of a fairytale sort of terrible or an allegory, I don't know what word I want, but also this sort of tangible I don't know how to articulate exactly what it is that I mean, because as you're describing, you're illustrating and creating this imagery, so to speak
Lance Watson
@lwatsonjrΒ Β·Β 4:44
But then what I would also offer is that there are things tangible, too, right? That there are things around us that have a lot more versatility and a lot more usefulness, and perhaps in our pursuit of innovation, in our pursuit of learning and trying so hard to be creative, that we have overlooked what's right in front of us. So, yeah, you definitely caught the gist of what I was trying to get at Illustratively
And a loosening of these concepts, or if I may throw in my latest tagline that I've been using, of breaking the boxes, blurring the lines and imagining possibilities, right. It's taking this object, whatever it might be, and what else can we do with it? It just is a great example of that
Lindsey Morrison
@OwenWilsonsNozeΒ Β·Β 2:33
It seems. I don't know, I think the more connected we get sometimes, I think the more disconnected in a way that we get in our everyday relationships. But anyway, that's a whole another thing. So back to the piece of music. It seemed very chaotic, but then beautiful. It seemed tragic and then amazing all at the same time. Which is very much life. And then I thought, is this about motherhood?
Lindsey Morrison
@OwenWilsonsNozeΒ Β·Β 0:29
Sorry. One more thing. It's all zeygeisty, like Deborah says. But somebody had sent me this link this morning, and I just I just clicked on it. So I watch it, and it ties into this. So I'm going to leave the link, and I hope that everybody watches it. It's really cool. Okay, thank you. Bye
And I think then we get to the state of the natural beauty again, but it's a different, more mature beauty than perhaps the wonder of a child. And I don't know exactly what I mean by that. Just that it's gone through this additional growth process and this additional expansion that somehow is just slightly more okay, this is funny
Binati Sheth
@Binati_ShethΒ Β·Β 1:12
Be open to everything, look at everything and just overall have a blast with observing things, learning from things, sitting on things, sitting in things, sitting around things, turning into a liquid. Okay, yeah, this kind of became about a cat. Can you tell I like cats? Of course I do. But, yeah, I think that's it. My age of wonder is become the catch. Become le mu. Thank you so much
I love it. I'm going to visit your age of wonder as swell. Thank you. Oh, and stop. There's no need to apologize. Life is busy. Things happen. It's all good. It's all good. Thank you. Thank you for replying. You didn't even have to do that. Thank you